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16 toAPTISTr'AND B E F L E C T O B , M A R C H ! 1 8 , 1 8 » 7 .
B D U O A T I O N A L . Tbe LMdlBg Boliool and TeMtaari'BurMU o(
tb* Boutb and Soutbweat li Ibe MATIONAI. BUHBAU O f •DDOATION.
J. W. BI»lr.rrop.,«ueo«MOrtoMlMqro«lbw»U and jf^W. BUtr. WIloo* BuUdtW, NMbtUle. Tonn. 8«nu rtamp (or tntomuiUoD.
SUNDAY SCHOOL BOARD OK TUB
Southern Baptist Convention J . M. FltOST, Socrotary.
i n Always the best. mk
0. M. FERRr * CO.. M ^ M Otirelt Mich.
MAKE MONEY FAST
BMIm«t IIOUM, Homora IWIiTuUiir LLG. ITAN • Doctor Bllla. lUnovttlMjaurijrilcui,
imnDU Obaattjr, (lunM (!al<l< lilianiii*ll»ia, 14 ClripM, Nniral. •li, KoMiDh Otlttrh, lirluln't T>UMM, MHIWU, lIuwlwIiHx, fv. nikl* OMuiiliUiiIti, •n<l »ll Itlool, 8klB,Mm«,iudKldn>; DUmwx. BMuUflMlliacaiuiilulnu. (Iu>r. U U W L . BTMTMID*, I U U K I K V . Iliu*. Prto* lu». hl» rul.l«il, I«i2 in.,5 IlK. UiwlMtMlli-t
oii**Hb, WboltHlaloiuviiiii. CablnH Co., Nuh«lll«. Ttnn.
POULTRY AND 8ARDEN FENCE ABd —toaiTiiUI Bom. J M M B m P » E «
YanLOMBttOTTLiuidOf«»«U» Pnidac»SpMUlty «IM IPnISk*. CaUlogiM^
K. L. BHUXIEKMBB. ATI.t.1TA.<»i.
Oak Lawn oultii)[ Yards. M The horae of the LtRht Bra-B A m»b. Brown LoKhorn, Buff M O T Cochin, White Plymouth - W ^ Rocki. Bronze Turkey, and " " Pekin Duck. Blrdi and egg$ for sale. Circular free.
MRS. S. R. WILSON. Mouse Creek, Tenn.
'Buckeye Bell Foundn
Has Five Departments: The Periodical Deparlmont, the MUslonnry Dopartmont, the Homo Depart-ment, the Bible Departmont, and the Book and Tract Department.
Carries a Full Line of Supplies. Publishes the Perlodlcali of the Soutukus Baitist Convkntion, and stands for what the Convention U dolnjf for Its Sunday-school Interests— fostering Hs power and onlarfring Its usefulness.
Desires the Support of the Churches, just as they give support to the other two Boards of the Convention-the Home Board at ,\tlanta. and the i-'orelgn Board at Richmond.
It has Given Away Thousands of Books. Bibles and Tracts, and Thousands of Dollars out of Its busi-ness, to Sunday School Missions In the dllTerent States. Kvery dollar contributed to the Board Is doubled in Its capacity for usefulness by hav-Ini; another dollar added to It.
This Part of the Convention's Work can be helped by supplying your Sunday School with Its Periodicals, or by contributions of money to lis Bible Fund, or to Its Book and Tract Fund. Can supply anything needed In the equipment of a Sunday School
H A R V E S T B E L L S .
UY MAJOR W. B. I'KNN, Is regarded by all BaptlaU in the South as the best song book published. Round and Shaped notes. Prices have been reduced. Sample copy 60 cents. Address M r b . W . K. Penn , Eureka Springs, Ark., or Baitist and Re-RfucctoR , Nashville, Tonn.
K OFFLINE
URES KOFFS. E
-PKICF. LIMT PBK UV.lBTKIt.
Tb« Teacher Adracced Qaartrrly Iat«rmedt»te Quarterly Primary Quarterly I.«*«on Leaf Primary Leaf
. 13'i cents.
. ceaui.
. i u cent*.
. ti« centt. I cect I cenu
Kind Word*, weekly ' Kind Words, aeml montbly. Kind Wordii. montlily Cblld'a Uem Illble lAtason Plcturoi— Picture Leuon Card* . . .
lt>i cenU oenU
< cenw. AH cents.
. 11. 3 cen'N.
Address all Orders, Either for Supplies or Samples, to the
BAPTIST SUNDAY SCHOOL BOARD
nat Will Hatch Ffum Itlfb Scoring lllaok A4tnr •ItanfowU.IIrat •lork In the Rumlj Sl.BUperliL Bend for free caialOBiit'.
\V>'«t n. Mortfia NMlittlle, Ti im. Pekin Duok tgg* II W per II.
AORNTS WANTED—»'or War In Cuoa, by M yueiada, Cuban repreiwnlstlve at Wash Inston. Kodortod by Cuban patriots. In tre m'ndoua demand. A bonauxa for acenu. Only ll.to BIc book, big eommltslon. Rvorfbody wants tbe oDlyendomrd, reliable book. Ouint free. Credit given Freight paid. Drop all tratb, asd n A o WM a month with J ^ r In Cuba Address todav. TIIK NATIONAL UO()K OUNCEKN, 3JS SM Dearborn 81., Chica-go, III
BELLS fitMl Alloj Chureh >nd ffehool B«ll.^ J»yfl«n< tjf Oauiosu*. C. M. BSCUL « VO.. nuiakar*. Qi,
KOFSLINE KURES
KOFFS.
..THE BAPTIST AND REFLECTOR.. Is going to enter on this Centennial year of Tennessee Baptist history with a determined cfTort to increase its useful-
ness for the Master, by giving to its people the best religious paper issued in America. It contemplates many things of helpfulness to the Cause.
mnm!mmmmmmmmmmmn!nm!n!f!!n!n!mmm?!?minmmmmmmmmmmmn!nm!i!ni^
I T S circulation has continued to grow but it is not what the Cause merits it should be. It feels that it should
put forth every legitimate means pos-sible to increase its circulation. We want 10 or 15,000 subscribers. There arc many faithful workers who arc giving their labors to the paper for the love of the Cause. We have decided to oiTer a useful, while not a gaudy or extravagant Premium to all, and for such a small number of subscribers, that any preacher or layman, boy or gfirl, can sccure it. To this end we have made arrangements to give a BEAUTIFUL WATCH FREE FOR ONLY SEVEN NEW YEARLY SUBSCRIBERS.
I HE WATCH is 14-carat Gold-filled. It is Hunting Case. It is Seven-jewel, good movement,
Stem Wind, Stem Set. Dust Proof. It is a good timepiece. It is guaranteed just as represented. You can have choice of cither LADIES' or GEN-TLEMEN'S Size. Almost an indis-pensable necessity to every one, is a Watch. You can secure this by a few hours work. Write at once for Sample copies of the papjfr and Sub-scription Blanks. This offer will be made to extend to a limited time. ACT AT ONCE. A BEAUTIFUL WATCH FREE FOR ONLY SEVEN NEW YEARLY SUBSCRIBERS. It will pay you.
lumuimiuiuiuiuiuiiiiuiumuiiuuiiuuiiuiuiumuimiiiuimuuuaiium As the Official Organ of the State Convention and its Boards it will contdnuc to contain many things of interest to
the whole State, and the great Baptiat hosts of the world.
-Address:
I'
BAPTIST AND REFLECTOR, NASHVILLE. TENN.-,
rns BaiTOT. eswbllehed IMS. rnsUArnsTluruK foniolldated August rns UAftisT iwi SPEAKIKG THE TRUTH IN LOVE.
Published erery Thursday. Enured at thS' postofflce at Naabnile. Tenn., as «eoondols«» matter
Old Seriea, Vol. LZ. NASHVILLE , TENN . , MAllCH 25, 1897. New Series, Vol. VIIZ., No. 31
CURBBMT TOPICS
-Important amendments to the
llalnes Liquor Law of New York are
lo l)e carried throui^h the L«Klsl<^ture.
They are designed to make tbe local
iipilon provision of the law more ef-
f.>ctl»e to do away with the "fake"
clubs and hotels which have sprung
up on every hand since the law went
Into ofTrct. It Is thought that with
these changes the law will be greatly
Improved. The Independeut says that
" I t has reduced the number of places
where liquor is dispensed In the State
by 20 per cent and Is fairly entitled
lo a proper trial "
—Last wi ek an event took place In
lJar»on City, Nevada, which complete-
ly threw Into the shade all public In-
terest In Cuba. Greece and other things
for the time being It was a prize
fight between two brutes whose names
we do not care to dignify by publish-
ing In our columns. Of course one
whipped the other. The only regret
about it was that each did not knock
the other into Insensibility. It was
eerUlnly a shameful afTair, and all tbe
more so because it was legalized by
tbe Leglsl»tar« of Nevada. There were
about 3,000 sports of every variety
who gathered to witness the battle, and
their passions were Inflamed to the
very highest pitch. It will be a long
time, we imagine, before Nevada ro-
coveri from this disgrace thus brought
upon her name and from the effects of
the corruption which naturally follows
In the wake of such an affair.
stances It would not be surprising if
she should Jump at an opportunity
to sell the Island to tbe Cu-
bans. Such a proposition has been
made by Gomez through the New York
World, and It met with great favor.
It Is recognized on every hand that the
administration of Weyler as Captain
General of the Inland has been an
Ignominious failure. His Idea of pac-
ifying the country. It seems, was to
kill all of the Inhabitants he could get
his hands on. By the way, we were
told while in Tampa that tbe<;uban
clgar-makcrs there gave one day's
earnings In each week to the Cuban
cause, amounting to about 110,000 each
week from all of them. On that day It
was said they worked harder and long-
er and with more enthusiasm, and
thus made more money than on other
days. You cannot conquer a people
with such a spirit as that.
The Lyre of Life.
BY I.AUIIA BIJBNSTT LAWSoW
The lyre of life. Mrunw with tbe heart ii quick •triDKii
Ho tense, timt to th« touch ot eacb caregslng breeite
It Rl ea responie. ik oft mlatucvd The player briDKa
Not only harmonleji from out lu brcaal. to cbarm and please
The iwteolnif world But cliioorda grate und Jtr tbe ear.
Dent to rfctlve ItH tweetemmelodles. Bo let uiitrlve,
Uaeb one to tune his lyre, that thoae who wait to bear
May gladly wait again: nor turn away to ((tTO Their encores to another.
Wild winds may rudely brush Tbe under strings, and call tbeni forth a mi-
nor strain But If no discord luars, the lephyrit lo tbe
after-bush Give to the world a gladsome melody again
Newport, Tenn.
Battlefleldt o f Christian Conquest.
—The Legislature has passed a bill
Incorporating the Centennial grounds,
and It has been signed by the Govern-
or and now becomes a law. The only
objection to this bill Is that It carries
with it the privilege of selling beers
and light wines on the grounds. It is
true that matters might have been
worse. The grounds might have been
Incorporated, along with a few eltUens
living near them, under the general
laws of the Stale, and this would have
given the privilege of establishing
saloons In «ir near the grounds But
while we are ihankfjil that matters are
not Borse, we aro sorry lhat they are
as bad as they arc We aro opposed
to beers and light wines, and wo object
to them under any and all elrcumstan-
ces. Still this special not of the Leg-
islature will give to the Centennial
managers the authority to control the
grounds, and we hope that the best of
order may prevail.
—Crete has almost overshadowed
Cuba In public interest during the
past several weeks. The Cuban strug-
gle, however, still continues. It is
•aid that the Spaniards aie beglnulng
to recogol«e that victory for them Is
Impossible. Toe Cubans oooupy the
whole Island outside of ft fe* large
oUlei and towns, and they conUnue to
make atUoks upon the towni even In
the vlolnUy of Havana Then the rainy
•eaion l i eomlng on, when tbe 8paa-
larde will not be able U* do any active
eaupalgnlnff. Betides, the treasury
' otBpalu l i about exhausted, together
wllh her oredl^ Under these olroum
—The situation In Crete has not
changed materially since last week.
The blockade of tbe Island by the
fleets of the European powers went Into
effect on March 8th, but It Las
amounted to very little, as it is said
tbe insurgent Cre^ns on the Island,
together with their Grecian allies, are
fully supplied with food. The threat-
ened blockade of Grecian ports by the
powers has not yet gone Into effect,
and we doubt If It ever will. The Em-
perors of Russia, Germany and Aus-
tria are said to be anxious for It so as
to coerce Greece into measures, and
the governments of Italy, Prance and
England have given a 'luari endorse-
ment to the policy. But the people of
these countries are evidently In sympa-
thy with Greece and the governments
are compelled to proceed rather cau-
tiously. Mr. Gladstone, true to his
natural Instincts, which have always
been on tbe side of freedom, has pub-
lished a pamphlet in which he scores
the Emperors of Germany and Kussia
very severely for their course I" this
matter, and expresses the strongest
sympathy for Greece. Mr. Gladstone
has only voiced the highest sentiments
of the English people, and Indeed of
the clvllleed world. Meanwhile, op-
erations are going forward very ac-
tively In Greece for a war on land
with Turkey. If the other powers
would let Greece alone, wo believe she
would whip Turkey In short order.
The whole situation reminds us of In-
stances which all of us have seen,
perhaps, In our sobool-boy (lays, in
which a bad boy and i little boy and
several big boys are the actors. The
bad boy Is very mean and aggres-
sive In his attitude toward tbe little
boy. The little boy flnally gets his
dander up and starts In to whip out
the bad boy, who, though a little
larger than he Is, is a coward at heart,
but the several big boys stop In and
take the side of the bad boy against
the little boy. We believe they ought
to keep hands off and let the little boy
give the bad boy a sound thrashing.
Wo suppoie our readers understand
that Turkey Is the bad boy and Greeoe
the little boy and the powers of lOU'
rope the big boys.
ur it«v J MrNRO giBsoH. n o
Often has this battle been fought,
but never, perhaps, has the fgbting
been so fierce and so long as in tbe
Netherlands. Motley's classic work
gives the story In full.
L«t us first maka some attempt to
estimate the opposing forces. On4he
one h«nd there was all tbe power of
Spain In the days of Its Imperial gran-
deur, with the best soldiers In Europe,
veterans trained In many a long cam-
paign, and commanded by the most
brilliant generals ol that famous age,
by Ferdlnando, Duke of Alva, by Don
John ol Austria, victor of L«panto,
and hy Alexan ler Farnese of I'arnia.
Tdo treasuries of Mexico and Peru sup-
piled tbe sinews o f W r , and behind all
was the fierce, Intolerant spirit of the
bigoted Ftalllp II
On the other hand—what? A small
country, much of which had been res-
cued from the sea and was-held by the
uncertain security i»f vast dykes, and a
people mostly plain, Industrious bur-
ghers, wealthy, happy, easily deceived
by solemn promises, nnd with little
disposition or training for war. There
were Indeed some nobles descended
from the anelent tiroes, but Insteaii of
I protecting their native land, they most
ly betrayed her or sold her. William,
Prince of Orange, was the only man
with brain enough to direct the striig
gle, and at the outset he cjuld And but
few with heart enough to support h N .
Well mliiht tho eonfllct i-eem absurd
from tho beginning. Wo aro con-
strained to Bsk, How could It be main-
tained for all those years? The secret
lay In the Inllexlble characters of tho
Prince nf Orange on the one hand, and
of Pnlllp II. on the other.
Tde onaracter of Philip I I . was full
of amnxlng oontradlctlons. The pas-
sion which domlnaU-d him was devo
tlon to Holy Church. Ho oould tol-
erate no dissent, and was ready to
proceed to any extremity with thoie
whom he called heretics. This deter-
mination to stick at nothing in the
uprooting of heresy was probably the
one strong point In bis oharaoter; the
rest was made up of a variety ot
weaknesses. He was deceitful to a
degree that would have made Machl-
avelll raise his eyebrows; yet, with all
his elaborate double dealing, he us-
ually succeeded in cleverly hoodwink-
ing himself. Promises, oaths, obliga-
tions, treaties, lies, treacheries, pri-
vate assassinations and wholesale
massacre and torture were equally
handy means to compass his noblo
ecclesiastical life purpose.
Will iam of Orange, on the other
hand, was so shrewd that he was
scarcely once deceived by his enemies,
so generous that be was often betrayed
by his friends. He worsted Philip
again and again by sheer honor and
straightforwardness. He accomplished
a berculean task almost alone by a
rare combination of tact. Insight,
caution, courage, endurance and wis-
dom, supported by an iron faith in
God.
A man becomes a power to be reck-
oned with, when he devotes his life to
one definite purpose; and here we have
the spectacle of two men of opposite
natures giving their lives to opposite
purposes and coming into deadly con-
flict Philip and Wil l iam by the ded-
ication of their life aim constituted
themselves respectively the champions
of the SUke and of the Cross.
Never did a war seem more hopeless,
never did a more splendid victory re-
sult from so much defeat. Will iam
and his gallant Hollanders proceeded
through blood and fire and torture to
gain "freedom to worship God;" and,
If the noUe of this historic conflict,
coming to us now down three Interven-
ing centilrles. does not tighten our
determination to maintain that same
freedom la face of opposing forces,
hardly less dangerous because more
subtle, we merely declare ourselves
unworthy of the past.
To get an Idea of the character of
the persecution which roused tho Neth-
erlands to resistance, let us attend a
meeting of tho "Blood Council" which
Alva set up on h'.s arrival In the
country.
A cart load of Information* apalnst
susiKSCted heretics has arrlvtd at the
door. The commissioners appoinud
to do the work of spies have been busy.
O.ie of those paiMjrs turns out to be an
acciisfttlon against eighty four inhab-
itants of Valencifnne*. Alva, In his
private room, hastily looks over some
of tho Mamo.4 itnd then send* tho accu-
Hatlon lnw» the council. There are
only two members of this grim council
who have tho power of voting, and they
are Spaniards. Tho Infamous Vargas
jocosely suggi-sts that tho whole eighty •
four be condemntd, to save the fouble
of going InU) the merits of each Indi-
vidual case. All the other councilors
agree crlnglngly except Hessels, there,
who has fallen asleep. They rouse
him and ho sleaplly yawns out, "To
tho gallows withhim." Tbe accusation
Is then rrturned to Alva, who hastily
o<»nflrmt this sweeping death sentence.
Forty eight hours afterward all these
Innocent victims have been banged or
burned or beheaded or drowned. This
Is one day's work of thecouacll. Soon
there Is not a family In the country
2 B A P T I S T A M ) I t K F L I X ' T O H , M A l l C H 2 5 . 1 8 9 7
b a t i s n o t bero&ved It It a c a r n l v a i of p a i n a n d d e a t h .
T b l « t r e a t m e n t r o u s e d the I o d k - b u I -
(er in t r people , a n d W i l l i a m w a s a b l e M) b t ' c in h U lonir a n d di f f loul t c a m -pa i i fn a g a l n e t A l v a . W e h a v e n o t 8pace t o tr 've even in o u t l i n e t h e h is -t o r y of Ihe l o n e a t r u g p l e . Suf l lce it o n l y to no te t h a t t h e N o t h e r l a n d o r s wroro c o n t i n u a l l y d e f e a t e d , t i l l a t l a s t ihf l iKhtlnp c a m e t o a c l i m a x in the n o r t h of H o l l a n d .
T o nee the s p i r i t a n d f e r o c i t y of th i s conf l i c t lot ud watch the sleifo of Loy-don.
Th in p i c t u r e s q u e t own was s u r r o u n d -ed by the S p a n i s h G e n e r a l V a l d e / in i -onimand of 8.000 t r o o p s which were c o n s t a n t l y be ing r e i n f o r c e d I n o r d e r t o b r l n s the sleire to ft s | )ecdy t e r m i n a t i o n , a n a c t of a m n e s t y was p u b l i s h e d . In vihlcti for i^ lvencss w a s p r o m i s e d t o a l l who would r e tu rn to t h e R o m a n C h u r c h . T h U ai ' t had no e t lec t , f o r the s t ru j f -(jle h a d now become a r e l i g i o u s one. and the men of Leydcn would r a t h e r d ie t h a n \ l e ld the i r f a i t h .
T h e c i ty was p o o r l y p r o v i s i o n e d , an<l. ihoui th the I n h a b i t a n t s were put on s t r i c t r a t i o n s , vet s u p p l i e s were (rlvlni; o u t
if I>eyden fel l , H o l l a n d was los t . W i l l i a m dei-lded o n a d e s p e r a t e p l an .
T h e l am! betwetn L.eyden and the sea was b e l o w j b c ocean level . T b o wate r waii kept ou t hy a sysUun of d y k e s . He reso lved to let In t he sea !
T h e g r e a t (rates of the c o a s t d ) k e were uulocked and t h e wa te r poured In At th i s t ime A d m i r a l U o l s o t a r -r ived with his fleet of sma l l vesse ls m a n n e d by e igh t h u n d r e d ' S e a Beg-g a r s ' T h e s e were wild a n d r eck l e s s desfHjni i ioes who g a v e no q u a r t e r and expected c o n e : tierce, s k i l l f u l , Indom-I tab ie p l ra ten r o a r i n g t he i r weird sea-Bong?. T h U tleet s a i l ed t h r o u g h the open d) ke o v e r the l and .
T h o u g h the re were Hfieen mi les be-t-veen tnem and L e y d e n , yet n e a r the c i ty t he r e was a l ake , a n d Bo l so t hoped s o o n to sa i l In to It T o h i s dis-m a y he f o u n d , a f t e r c o v e r i n g a s h o r t d i s t a n c e , t h a t he w a s f ace t o f a c e with a n o t h e r dyke . His men r o s e t o the o c c a s i o n , s to rmed t h e d y k e , c u t t o plccflH the S p a n i a r d s o n It, d u g o u t a g a p , a n d sa i led t h r o u g h .
Bu t now the sea , s p r e a d i n g o v e r so much c o u n t r y , l)ecame rhAllow, and the v e i s e l s g r o u n d e d . O o i s o t h u n g h i s h e a d In d e s p a i r whi le t he S p a n i a r d s l a u g h e d a t the Idea of r e l i e v i n g I>9yden by wa t e r . T h e p o o r , f a m i s h i n g , be-s ieged peop le in L e y d e n c l imbed u p to t he a n c i e n t tr^wer of H o n g l s t a n d looked a n x i o u s l y t o w a r d t h e o c e a n , s ighinK t o r t h e west wind. A l a s ! t he e a s t wind mocked them, a n d k e p t t h e w a t e r s h a l l o w . Thoy were In e x t r e m i t y . D o g s a n d r a t s l>ccamo de l i cac ie s . T h e y m u r m u r e d a t t he m a g l s i r a t u a s he p a s s e d t h r o u g h the s q u a r e , b u t h e o n l y t u r n e d r o u n d o n t h e m a n d s a i d in ef-fect , " T a k e my b o d y , fe«d o n me , bu t n e v e r e x p e r t s u r r e n d e r whi le I a m
^ a l i v e . " r h o n o f a m i s h i n g wre tohes c h w r e d a t tueso w o r d s a n d p a r a d e d r o u n d the wal ls , h u r l i n g d e f l a n c e a t the S p a n i a r d s whi le f a m i n u a n d the p l a g u e were d e c i m a t i n g them.
A n x i o u s and wea ry o y t s l ooked f r o m thu t o w e r of H c n g i s l , a n d , a t l a s t , t h e r e i t was , a s t o r m c o m i n g f r o m the n o r t h w e s t . T h e wind ro l l ed in t h e sea . T h e wa te r w a s dcviHir cvi ry m o m e n t , a n d i i o l s o t s Oeet fioHted a g a i n . Ho f o u g h t thu S p a n i s h Mhlps a m o n g the t op« of tbo t r ^ s a n d f l o a t i n g wrcokago . M a n y B f t a n i a r d s a t t e m p t e d t o o s o a p e a l o n g the d y k e s , i iut t h e fleroe t)i>a l i u g g a r s leaped i n t o t h o w a t e r , s t a b -b i n g a n d d r o w n i n g iho v e i e r n n s of H p a l o , n o t auuuatt iraed t o t h o t e a m -p h i b i o u s Imttlns. A m i d t h e t h u n d u r a n d t h e l i g h t n i n g t h e B p a n t a r d a saw t h e w a t e r g e t t i n g e v e r ili e p e r . I t •oemed ( i j i t .em a s If t he d e m o n s of m u r d e r wore r i d i n g In u p o n a n e s t e r* m i n a U n g Qood.
T h e r e were s t i l l two s t r o n g f o r t s , b r i s t l i n g with s o l d i e r s , l y i n g between U o l s o t a n d l .«ydcn. T h e n i g h t c a m e on . H o i s o t do ic rmlned t o m a k e a d o s p o r a t « a t t a c k upi>n these f o r t s t h o nex t m o r n i n g , whi le the b u r g h o r s of I .«ydeu dec ided t o s a l l y o u t t o bin iim s l s t ance . In t he m i d d l e of tho n i g h t ii loud c r n s h was h o a r d , as n l a r g e piiri of t h e wall t)f lx<yiien foil d o w n ! Th.' S p a n i a r d s t h o u g h t u t i emenUou« mill-n i g h t s o r t i e whs be ing uiiide In u t t e r t e r r o r they d o s c r U d the i r f o i t a a n d c r ep t a w a y t l i r ough th.- nii»lil rtl.iiig the r u i n s of the l a s t dyko
T h e nex t m o r n i n g the i l readi 'd for tn were seen t o b o e n i p l y . and l<«'vdeii wiip s a v e d
K v e r j ex t ren i l ly of fi<niine hiid Inst-n e n d u r e d , a n d the inv lne i l i l e S p i i n i i i n U had l>eeD dofeatet l I ' h l l i p niicti* h a v e soon t h a t a people who enu ld d r o w n t h e i r n a t i v e land to wavr lier (roni hl.t t y r a n n y had more s p i r i t thiin e v e r h< cou ld b r e a k
T h u s we h a v e looked m tlie t•au^<^ of e x a s p e r a t i o n , the • IJlood ( " o u n e i l . " and h a v e d o t a t l t d nn Inc ideni •tbowing the s o l r l t of the ll<>!lftndor» wlit-n de-f e n d l n g t h e l r f a m i H e > a n d h ' < m c i > a t r a i n K t
e x t e r m i n a t i o n and r u i n If «.<> would get s o m e Idea of the Iniplai-able feroe-Ity of the S p a n i a r d s , we h a v e o u l y lo r e m e m b e r what U c a l l e d " T h e S|>an Ish Kury "
I ' h l l i p ' s so ld ie r* . havliiL' iTiulinied for lack of pay w e r - a t i rac leU hy the wea l th and s p l e n d o r -if the i- ty <>f A n t w e r p . H u n g r y fo r t:>''>l. lh«-> eoii-cen t ra te i l t he i r forcep. to p l u n d e r . \ f , l -w e r p T h e d e f e n d e r * of the eily t u r n e d t r a i t o r s , a n d the S p a n i a r d s bwrst t h r o u g h t h e h a s t i l y ert*<-ied dcfensei . s h o u t i n g • S n u t i m i i / K ^ j f u n ' •> miwin , (I rnrnt, -i 'tuyn. x lonfr,' I'nf l i i i rgher» t r i ed to de fend tln-ir hi ' tnee l)iit were cu t d o w n : thoy lay in h e a p s ID the s t r ee t s r u t h l e s s l y s la i i^ 'h i - rcd T h e S p a n i a r d s wore I n c v e f y tioii-e, k i l l i n g the men a n d t o r t u f l n g the wom<<n and c h i l d r e n t o e x t r a c t the sfcrol t i of hid den t r e a s u r e Klght thoui>and (HTi-onf a t l e a s t were k i l l ed , a n d a va^ t <iiiant-t l ty of bocJty s e c u r e d ; bu t s t i l l the s p o i l e r s wore no t sa t ' s f i ed Thin f e a r ful n i g h t wa» .,linply a c a r n i v a l of fiends; e v e r y c r ime was iierfsjlraK^d. F e r o c i t y , g reed a n d lus t" were u t t e r ly u n r e s t r a i n e d A n t w e r p , om- of t h e finest c i t i e s In Kuroi«!, l)ecamo a smok-i n g r u i n
D o e s n o t a l l t h i s g i v e us s o m e Idea of w h a t a l o n g a g o n y th i s s ' r u g g l e fu r p o l i t i c a l a n d r e l i g i o u s f r endon i w a s ? S c e n e s l iko t h e s e worn enac ted a l l o v e r t h e c o u n t r y . W h e n a ci ty wam Iwjsiegcd the b u r g h e r s s tood t o the wa l l s , a n d e v e n t h e w o m e n f o u g h t In t h e t h i c k of tho c a r n a g e ; when a c i ty fell It was a l w a y s a S p a n i s h f u r y T h u s t he t ight r a g e d u p a n d d o w n tho l a n d with o n l y such r e s p i t e s a s d e s o l a t i o n s and d e v a s t a t i o n b r i n g .
V e t a m i d a l l t h i s no l so of con f l i c t , tbo s h o u t of tho v i c t o r a n d tho c r y of tho d y i n g , W i l l i a m of O r a n g e s l o w l y a o n s o l i d a t c d " T h o f l u t ch K e p u b l l c " In t h o N o r t h . T h o s u n «if l i b e r t y a t l a s t r o s e o v e r t h i s t o a of b l o o d , a n d the I t o f o r m a t l o n s a v e d Its h o m e on a h a l f d r o w n e d l a n d
T h e r e Is s o much d e t a i l of h o r r o r , such f e roc i t y of l i g h t i n g be low tbo g r o u n d . In mlnos d u g u n d e r c i ty w a l l s . In strcntB, In houxos , o n tbo s r a a n d In t h o s e a , such d e v o t i o n a n d f a i t h , o ruo l ly , t r o a o h o r y a n d niunnnosH, t h a t wo a r o a p t t o l o s e o u r s e l v e s in tho in t r io t fcy of d e t a i l , a n d s o m i s s tho Impross ivo o u t l i n e of t h i s g r i m cnm> p a i g n a n d t h o m i g h t y losson i t i o a o h o s (o r n i n o t t s t agos .
W a s It a l l In v a i n ? W a s l i b e r t y of oouso ienoo t o o d e a r l y boughtV A h , DO; t h o s e s o u n d s of c a r n n g o a n d of p a i n h a v e u o t s u n k Irito o b l i v i o n . T h o s e u r lmos a r o n o t forgti lU' t i ; t h o s e b o r o l a ^ ^ t a v u n o t d ied If t h e r e Is • n y dl lTl9lAoe between r i g h t a n d w r o n g , be tween t r u t h a u d f a l s e h o o d , t h e s e
e v e n t s p r o c l a i m t o tho w o r l d In a volco wo d a r e n o t d i s r e g a r d t h a t lib-e r t y of c o n s c l c n c e is tho b i r t h r i g h t of m a n , a n d m u s t bo m a i n t a i n e d by h i m , now a s t h e n , In tho f a c a of e v e r y t e r r o r a n d m o n a c o a n d p e r s e c u t i o n , In sp l to of e v e r y wile , t h r o u g h e v e r y c r i s i s , r i g h t o n t o tho e n d . iUsmcmber how, when A n t w e r p was b e i n g s a c k c d , the city c h i m e s wore g e n t l y m a r k i n g the p a s s i n g h o u r s ; t h r o u g h e v e r y a g o n y of h i s t o r y wo hoa r t he vo ice of ( !od
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1 h a v e l)ccn Impressed f o r a l ong t ime t h a t n o t e n i a i g h elTort ls m a d e f o r tho c o n v e r s i o n of t he . lews T h i s is p a i n f u l l y a p p a r e n t , when In o u r m o s t e a r n e s t s |)ecchos, a n d m o s t fer-vent p r a y e r s f o r t h e c o n v e r s i o n of the w o r l d , t he J e w s a r c no t oven men t ion ed. It l o o k s very much a s if b e c a u s e t )od h a s p r o m l s d t o " t u r n InWjulty a w a y f r o m I s r a e l " we a r o d i s p o s e d t o o c c u p y t o w a r d s them tho s a m o g r o u n d o u r a n i l - m l s s l o n a r y b r e t h r e n ho ld with r e f e r e n c e t o p r e a c h i n g thu gos | )c l In a l l thu w o r l d As o n e of t hem ox-p ressed It, " C o d h a s s a i d , the (ios|>el s h a l l bo p r e a c h e d In a l l the wor ld , and Me is ftt»let<» d o th i s w i t h o u t o u r he lp j u s t let l l lni d o It " Hut . s u r e l y , thl» is no t the p ro j i c r g r o u n d f o r us t o o c c u p y . It Is t r u e (Aid h a s power to ful t l l l HI* p r o m i s e , bu t e<iually t r u e He ha* itald to bis c h u r c h , " C o ye in to al l t he wor ld and p r e a c h the ( iosf ie l t o eve ry c r e a t u r e , " a n d we a r o only In t he l ine of du ty when we a r e obey-ing, with a l l o u r power , t h i s c o m m a n d . C.od m i g h t h a v e c u m m l s s l o n e d a n g e l s t o t h i s work , o r He m i g h t h a v e b r o u g h t It t o succes s fu l I s sue by tho e x e r c i s e of d i r ec t d l v l n o p o w e r , with no I n t e r v e n i n g a g c n c y , tiut Ho h a s no t so o r d a l n e i i . T h e t a s k Is commi t t ed
I to u«. H i s |K!ople, exc lu s ive ly Cioing f o r t h . aec(>rnpanlod by J e s u s , a n d p r c a c h l n g tho G o s p e l " w i t h t he Holy ( i h o s i sen t down f r o m h e a v e n . " the wor ld m u s t be c o n v e r t e d by us, no f a r a s Is r e v e a l e d , o r no t a t a l l . How I m p o r t a n t , how g r a n d Is thl< m i s s i o n ! H o « it a p p e a l s to tho h e a d a n d h e a r t of eve ry s lncoro l o v e r of . l e sus ' T h o J e w s su re ly m a k e a p a r t of t h i s wor ld t o which we a r o sen t , a n d ye t how so ldow a r c they t h o u g h t of , a n d how l i t t l e e f f o r t Is put f o r t h t o s a v e them. T h i s , I a m i r a r suaded . Is no t a s it s h o u l d be, n o r c a n It bo p l e a s i n g t o t he M a s t e r N o t s o f e l t a n d ac ted I ' a u l , tho g r e a t A p o s t l e t o tho G e n t i l e s . W h i l e m a g n i f y i n g h i s m i s s i o n t o tho G e n t i l e s , he bad a c o n s t a n t b u r d e n o n h is s o u l f o r h i s " k i n s m e n a c c o r d i n g t o t h o i l o s h . " a n d h i s " h e a r t ' s d e s i r e a n d p r a y o r tr* G o d " w a s f o r t h o l r c o n -v e r s i o n . W e s h o u l d h e r e i n fo l l ow h i m a s ho fo l lowed C h r i s t , b u t a l a s ! I f e a r wo d o not . W h y Is t h i s ? Much of It Is i i f lcausoof tho p r e j u d i c e a m o n g tho n a t i o n s a g a i n s t tbo J e w s ~ a p r c j u -dloo a s u n j u s t to thoin a s It Is d i s g r a c e -f u l t o us . O u r o n l y e x c u s e is t h a t wo h a v e Inhe r i t ed t h i s p i o j u d l c u f r o m f r o m o u r a n c e s t o r s . T n o Jow h a s boon a " h i s s i n g a n d a b y w o r d " t h r o u g h tho c o n t u r i o s - m a l t r c a t o d , pe r socu tod , h o u n d e d a m o n g t h e n a t i o n s t i l l t h e s t a r r y f l ag of l i be r ty t o t h o o p p r e s s e d l loa ted o v e r t h e wes t e rn w o r l d ; ho re-u c l r e d n o Jus t ice , a n d a l m o s t n o q u a r -t e r a n y w h e r e . I n s t e a d of b e i n g a n I s r a e l i t e , h e waHoompel led t o lie a n I s h -m a o l l t e , w i th h i s * 'hand a g a i n s t e v e r y m a n , " beOauso " e v e r y m a n ' s h a n d WAS aga ins t h im." Slowly, hut It Is h o p e d s u r e l y , tb i a p r e j u d l c o of t he a g e s Is d y i n g a w a y , W h e n t h i s h a s all disappeared, and may tho Lord speed th^t day, it will be found that t h e J e w Is a m a n l i k e o t h e r m e n , with certain raoe oharaotorlstles, but nat-u r a l l y n o be t te r a n d n o w o r s e t h a n o t h e r men .
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r e c o r d tho f a c t t h a t n o m a n e v e r haii t r u e r f r i e n d s t h a n thoy ; a n d ho sol omuly bol loves t h a t , w h a t e v e r bo tli<-J o w ' s f a t i l u , b e t r a y a l of f r i o n d s b l p U n o t ODo of t h e m . H i s expe r i ence a m o n g t i iem h a s wiped o u t a l l p re ju d ice f r o m h i s m i n d , a n d lio n o w won d e r s t h a t i t ove r ex i s t ud , a n d h e llnd^ in h i s h e a r t a n I n c r e a s i n g d e s i r e for t h e i r s a l v a t i o n .Nor d o e s ho iKillev, thu t a s k a ho|H>less one . Ho h a s ta lkcu C h r i s t i a n i t y t o m a n y of t h e m , a n d han a l w a y s hud a po l l t o a n d res i iec t lu l a t t e n t l o n .
A p a r t f r o m t b o p r e j u d i c e of which I h a v e H|ioken, which n a t u r a l l y glvei, tho Jow a r e s e n t m e n t fo r i t s manl fe»t a n d groHs in juxt lee . thu chief o b s t a c l e to III* c o n v e r s i o n Is tbo m a n y excel lencles of tho r e l i g i o n of h i s f a t h e r n ii' which he no l o n a c i o u s l y a d h e r e s In s o m e re»|H'Cl8 ho eees It surpaHnlng the exeni |> l l l lca t ion of ( ' h r l u t l a n i t j a r o u n d h im. a n d , c o n s e q u e n t l y , IK-
feels t h a t he would lose , r a t h e r t han g a i n , by e x c h a n g i n g f o r It. T h i s 1» n o t a b l y t r u e In r e l a t i o n to t he poor Ho sues p r o f e s s i n g C h r i s t i a n s r o l l i n g In wea l t h , " m o r e t h a n h e a r t c a n wUh. ' and <-vit(i wotnen a n d e t i l ldron s tn rv Ing by thi-ir oldti He ree» an a r m y of i r a i i i p* t f ' g g U u ' fritiii di>or to d o o r of < h r l« t i a i ) hoiif-etiolds, wlilio iin needed inilllonH a r e l icing pi led up by a f a v o r t d fi'w l ie Bccs a l l th i s a m o n g lho>o who elaiiii to lie < h r l s t l a n s . and who look on llm J e w s wltt> s c o r n , a?" u n w o r t h y of ttioir aHxoola l lon . t>iit no t o n e iK'ggar . no t o n e t r a m p Ik a Jew T h e r e l i g i o n of bin f a t h e r s f o r b i d s th i s , a n d t h i s p o o r Jow s h a n k s the wea l th «>f Ills m o r e fortunHt4> b r e t h r e n Is It s u r p r i s i n g , ih)-n, t h a i sui h a ea r l -c a t u r t of < ' h r U i l a n l t y d o e s no t c h a r m h im, a n d t h a t ho c o m m i t s the n a t u r a l m i s t a k o o f m e a s u r i n g C h r i s t i a n i t y , n o t by t h e lea t^hlngs of Its d i v i n e A u t h o r , bu t by t h " c o n d u c t of h i s p ro f e s sed f o l l o w e r s ? T h e n , whon t o a l l t h i s ho a d d s t h u s e e m i n g Ind i f f e r ence t o h i s c o n v e r s i o n of t h o s e In whose Chr i s -t i a n i t y he h a s confldonco, it Is no t w o n d e r f u l if t he Jew Is h a r d t o c o n v e r t . B u t s h a l l we g lvo ufi t h e e f f o r t f o r a l l t h i s ? Ily no m e a n s . " B l i n d n e s s in p a s t h a s h a p p e n e d u n t o I s r a e l , " but C o d c a n r e m o v e t h a t b l i n d n e s s , ami Ho will In a n s w e r t o f a i t h f u l p r a y c a n d f a i t h f u l e f f o r t . B u t whe ther Im does o r no t , such p r a y o r a n d such e f f o r t is o u r d u t y , a n d f o r t h i s oni> a r e we r e s p o n s i b l e — n o t f o r resu l io
M a y tho I..ord a w a k e n us t o o u r d u t y . t h a t t h o much a b u s e d a n d m u c h s l an dpred Jew,, may llnd a p l a « ) in o u r h e a r t s . In o u r p r a y e r s a n d in o u r ef f o r t s t o g l v o the M a s t e r h i s o w n t h a t l i e m a y " s e e thu t r a v a i l of h i s soul a n d tiu s a t i s l i e d . "
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I t i s a p r o b l o m o ld a s tbo h u m a n r a c o I h a v e a l w a y s p l d u r o d A d a m a s a n a n x i o u s , c a r o - w o r n l o o k i n g olil g r a n g e r , w h o would s i g h f i f ty t imes a d a y , r u n h i s i r r e s o l u t e l i nge r s t h r o u g h h i s h a i r a s ho s a t on a l o g a n d won-dered^ w b e r o ho c<Mild find a s p o t t h a t wou ld s u i t tho o ld w o m a n , I s o l a t e the b o y s f r o m k i m p t a t i o n , bo oonvon ien i t o w a t e r , f o r e i g n t o m o s q u i t o InfocUid d l s t r i o t s , f r e e f r o m m a l a r i a , a u d , a t t h e s a m e t ime, b e a u t i f u l f o r l o c a t i o n
W b e r o o u r f i r s t p a r e n t p i tubsd h is t e n t h i s t o r y d u o s n o t I n f o r m u s , bu t I a m s i i ro a l l of t he se , a n d a h u n d r e d and o n e o t h e r c o n s i d e r a t i o n s , we re sug-ges t ed t o t h e m a n w h o f i r s t l aunohed o u t u> o h o o s e tho p l a c e of h i s h a b i t a -t i o n .
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a home, bo h a d o n e end I n ' m i n d , a n und ho novor f o u n d ; l iko t h o u s a n d s who h a v e c o m e a n d g o n e s ince , ho d i e d a d i s a p p o i n t e d m a n . 1 d o n ' t wonder t h a t C a i n t u r n e d o u t b a d ; I a l w a y s s a i d h e wou ld . Ho h a d a n iiehlng c o n s c i e n c e , a n d , I prouumo, ho ' . t i l lered f r o m i n d i g e s t i o n ; f o r ho llvod I II a c i ty
l l a p p l n o s s i s t h e m o s t l i luslvt i uf a l l ih ings f o r which men l ight and Hcareh and weep a n d d ie . It Is tho moMt i ,r<clous of a l l t h o g i f t s of h e a v e n , iiiid It Is thu o n e f o r which a l l men a r e IVing; b u t o n l y h e r o and t h o r o d o you
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I nay h a p p i n e s s Is no t Influenced liy o u t w a r d c i r c u m s t a n c e s a n d condl t lon i , , ilii a v e r a g e r e a d e r Is s u r p r i s e d , a s we III! a r e . a t t h e d i s c o v e r y of m a n y iin-Mtlior e v e r y d a y t r u t h worked ou t by ( i .mmon ex|>erlence. It I s a t h i n g
money c a n n o t buy . and tbo l o s s of money c a n n o t t a k e a w a y I t d o o s no t .lepond o n g o a d h e a l t h , n o r d o e s It live e v e r y t ime In tho brown s t o n e f r o n t
Tho h a p p i e s t p e r s o n tho wriu i r over k n o w w a s a p o o r g i r l In N o r t h C a r o -l ina. S h e w a s a d a y l a b o r e r In a e l g a r f a c t o r y S h e w a s b e a u t i f u l a s the d r e a m of t h e m o r n i n g : she loved everylH>dy, a n d h<r I m p a r t i a l love b r o u g h t l ove in r e t u r n — e v e r y b o d y i o v w l h e r Hor hoa l th wr<cked, s h e was p r o n e u p o n a liod of a l l l lc t lon f o r y e a r s S h e was sup iwj rUd by tbo h a n d of p u b l i c c h a r i t y W n o n I ca l led Ui see h r she was s o weak a n d thin I c o u l d see t h e s u n l i g h t t h r o u g h her h a n d H e r e x p e r i e n c e was a m o s t I joaut l fu l s t o r y of t r u s t a n d s u b m i s -s ion . S h e u t i l ized iier f r a i l s t r e n g t h In w r i t i n g t o p e o p l e In t r o u b l e , of whom s h e l e a r n e d t h r o u g h hor f r i e n d s a n d the , n e w s p a p e r s .
T o s u p p o s e h a p p i n e s s Is d e p e n d e n t upon t h e p l a c e of o u r r e s i d e n c e Is a •ommon m i s t a k e . A m a n b u i l d s h i m a new h o u s e In a now l o c a l i t y , h o p i n g Mj e s c a p e t r o u b l e , bu t t he dev i l on-u-rs t h a t now h o u s o b e f o r e ho d o e s , and a t Its ve ry t h r e s h h o l d tho m a n • t u m b l o s o v e r a n old f re t , t e m p e r , ,.r t r o u b l e , a n d tho new h o u s e Is the h a b i t a t i o n of a n u n h a p p y m a n .
W h i l e o n e ' s h a p p i n e s s d o e s n o t do pond u p o n tho h o u s o ho l ives In, It does d e p e n d u j ion t h e t ime ho l ives In. Did y o u o v e r t h i n k t h a t t ime Is t h o only c o m m o d i t y e v e r y m a n h a s c o r -nered , t o s p e a k a f t e r tho a n a l o g y of W a i l S t r e e t ? T i m e is t h o o n l y t h i n g .if wh ich e v e r y m a n h a s a m o n o p l y ; eve ry m a n h a s a l l t h e r e is. U is n o t r e g u l a t e d b y t h e c o m m e r c i a l law of s u p p l y a n d d e m a n d ; i t c o m o s a n y w a y . It Is n o l j o d y ' s t ime , b u t It is e v e r y -b o d y ' s t i m e . W h a t t o d o with It Is a s e r i o u s q u e s t i o n with s o m o pooplo. A ll t t lo g i r l u p o n b e i n g t o ld sho wou ld live f o r e v e r , s a i d : " I t m a k e s me s o t i r e d . " T h e t h r e e f a m i l i a r d i v i s i o n s of t i m e b o t h e r s u s o v e r m u c h , a n d t h a t s h o w s w h a t a l a r g o pe r con t . of us is I m a g i n a t i o n . W o h a v e d i v i d e d o u r l i v e s I n t o t h r e e p e r i o d s — t h e p a s t , p r e s e n t a n d f u t u r e . T w o t h i r d s of i t is I m a g i n a t i o n .
M e m o r y i s a g o o d t h i n g , b u t in m e m o r y Is n o t w h e r e men s h o u l d l lvo. Y o u r w h o l e l i f e l> l o o k i n g f o r w a r d . Men s h o u l d t a k e t h e i r p o s i t i o n j u s t midway iNtwoen t h e p a s t a n d t h e fu -tu r e , w i t h i o m e r o o t s r u n n i n g b a c k a n d s o m e p e n e t r a t i n g t h e o t h e r w a y . T h e r e a r e p o r s o n s who s i t u p o n t h e i r g r i e f s a i m i s e r a b l e fowls s i t u p o n e g g s t h a t a r o s p e n t , a n d t h e l o n g e r t hey s i t t h e w o r s e ihey a r e . T h e p a s t s h o u l d o n l y be a n Ineon t lve f o r t h e f u t u r e a n d t h o p r e s e n t , a n d It t h e r e Is a n y of U t h a t wi l l n o t s e r v e t h a t p u r -pose , l e t U g o . A t o t e r a n s h o u l d r e -m e m b e r o l d * l o t o r l e s whon b e c o m e s t o new b a t t l e s , b u t ho s h o u l d n o t r e s t o n h i s g u n b e o a u s o t h e d l s e h a r g a won
tho l ight; ho s h o u l d l o a d It a g a i n a n d put h i s llngur on the t r i g g e r . I t i s c r y i n g o v e r w h a t wo h a v e a n d d o n o t want, a n d o v e r wha t wo h a v e n o t a n d want , t h a t m a k e s u s u n h a p p y . A f t « r every f a i l u r e s t a r t with a f r e s h p a g e , and d o no t look b a c k a t S o d o m . T a k e u p one hole m o r o In tho b u c k l e . If nece s sa ry , o r lot o u t , a c c o r d i n g t o c i r c u m s t a n c e s , with y o u r f a c e t o tho f ron t ; d r a w a t i gh t e r roign, l a y o n whip and s p u r and p res s g a i n s t t h e lilt, r i d e ! r ide ! f o r y o u r life; f o r ve ry H'lon thi! r ace will l>u over , a n d y o u Mititii u n s a d d l e ! I would r a t h e r d i e with tho i ;ear on and bo d r a g g e d off the Held' I would l iko to f a l l In t h e tifti i ' . ! (), tho t o r t u r e of t h o s e w h o a r e p r o n e upon bods of alUlction a n d look o u t a t the window, c o u n t i n g c a c h whlr l l i ig inomont p a s s , k n o w i n g t h a t l ai li l,rli)g« them o n e m o m e n t n e a r e r ili(> |)ia<:e where bleeps the d r e a m l e s s du^l uf tht lr a n c e s t o r s , l o n g s i nce f o r g o t t u n ! O, the b i t t e r t o r t u r e of those who a r o ( l l sab led Ij^cAuso of y o u t h f u l f u l l y !
Any m a n who t h i n k s h'j h a s d o n e e n o u g h is I m m o r a l . W e n e v e r d o e n o u g h . If wo were judged f o r w h a t we do not . a s we a r e fo r wha t wo d o , we would a l l bo In t b o p e n i t e n t i a r y .Never fo rgo t an o l i l igAt lon; a l w a y s fo rgo t an I n j u r y D o not let the sun go down o n y o u r w r a t h , b u t let i t look u p o n you eve ry m o r n i n g in the execu t ion of s o m e deed of m e r c y , a n d you sha l l h a v e a c l e a r c o n e c l e n c o and good hoa l th e v e r y St . V a l e n t i n e ' s (lay . \8 men u p o n tho b r o a d o c e a n , and In the m i d d l e of it , c a s t use less t h i n g s o v e r b o a r d , s o d o with y o u r re -gre t s , y o u r m i s t a k e s , y o u r s i n s . On th is S t . V a l e n t i n e ' s d a y , h a v e y o u a n y g r u d g e s ? H a v e y o u a n y w o u n d s which a r e u n h e a l e d — p o i s o n e d w o u n d s ? Arc t h e r e a n y on w h o m you m e a n t o t a k e v e n g e a n c e when t h e o p p o r t u n i t y c o m c s ? If so , c a s t t h e m o f f , s a y i n g : " F a r e w e l l , I s h a l l never see t h e e a g a i n " I ' o r o n e d a y In tho y e a r let you r sou l lie whi te
Neve r let y o u r h o p e s t o p t h i s s ide of heaven Lot y o u r a m b i t i o n l)e white-winged l>3i y o u r l ove be holy , un -conia tn inaU'd by lus t , u n m a r r o d b y j e a l o u s y A r e t h e r e a n y a r o u n d a b o u t you whoso n a m e , whon It comes , i s d i f c o r d In y o u r e a r , and Ins t ead of s a y i n g " G o d b les s h i m , " d o y o u In-voke t h o e u r s o of t i o d o n h im? Twen ty y e a r s , f o r t y y e a r s , fifty y e a r s , y o u h a v e l)ccn s p a r e d f r o m d e a t h . H a s tho r u l e of G o d ' s merc i e s t a u g h t y o u n o t h i n g ? How m a n y p e r s o n s c a r r y h e a r t s llHed with tho llrcs of ha lo . T h e dev i l Is h a t e ; G o d Is l o v e In a town In A l a b a m a a y o u n g m a n w a s sho t In t r y i n g t o In t e rvene botwcon h i s b r o t h e r and o t n o r s In a q u o r r o l . Aft-e r tbo d e a t h of tho y o u n g m a n h i s b r o t h e r r e c o v e r e d f r o m tho i n t o x i c a -t ion, a n d bo s w o r e t o t a k e v e n g e a n c e on ills b r o t h e r ' s s l a y e r . In t h e m o a n -t ime ho road tho S c r i p t u r e s a n d h i s mind w a s c h a n g e d , a n d In h i s b r o t h -er s g r a v o ho b u r l e d a l l b i t t e r n e s s , and t h o m a r b l e s l a b , the p r e t t i e s t , whi tes t t o m b s t o n e In tho S t a t e , b o a r s th i s e p i t a p h ; " V o u g o a n c o Is m i n e ; I will r e p a y ; s a l t h t h o i ^ r d . " T h a t ocean is d e e p e n o u g h a n d wido e n o u g h t o l i ldo al l y o u r g r u d g e s .
Llvo in tho h e a r t s of y o u r fo l lows. W e s t P o i n t , Mi s s .
- A C h r i s t i a n f r i o n d , c a l l i n g u p o n a p o o r old w o m a n In S c o t l a n d , f o u n d her In g r e a t p a i n , a n d e x p r e s s e d s o r -row a t see ing h e r s u f f e r so m u c h " O , " sa id J c a n n i o , " I t ' s J u s t an a n s w e r t o p r a y e r . Y o u see, I ' v e l a n g p r a y e d t o bo c o n f o r m e d t o t h o I m a g e of C h r i s t . 8101*0 those a r e tho m o a n f , I ' v e n a e t h -Ing t o d a o wl ' t h e o h o o s l n ' o ' t h e m . I t Is o u r s t o a i m a t mootness f o r H i s prosonco, a n d t o l e a v e It t o H i s wis-dom t o t n k ' I l l s a l n way w P us . I would r a t h e r suiTer t h a n s in o n y d a y . "
Jesus and Jonah.
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T h i s v o l u m e by J . W . M c G a r v o y , P r e s i d e n t of tho C o l l e g e of t h e B ib le , L e x i n g t o n , Ky , o u t l i n e s a l a r g o flold. I t c o n s i s t s of f o u r d i s t i nc t p a p e r s o r i g i n a l l y c o n t r i b u t e d t o t he Chri»tinn Utandard. T h o f i r s t r ev iews a .S'l/m-pogium p u b l i s h e d in tho Uibliml World P r o f . M a t h e w s , o n e of the e d i t o r s , fe l t moved l a s t s p r i n g t o a d d r e s s s u n d r y r e l i g i o u s t e a c h e r s , with tho view of a s c e r t a i n i n g whether In t h e i r o p i n i o n C h r i s t ' s a l l u s i o n t o J o n a h ' s exp^ r l -ence a s r e c o r d e d in Mattl iow s a n c t i o n -ed the h l s u j r l c i t y of tho so-ca l l ed B o o k of J o n a h . In tho J u n e numl>er of the ISihliml World e i g h t r ep l i e s were pub-lished A m o n g t h o w r l t o r s were F r a n k land J o h n s o n of tho U n i v e r s i t y of Ch i -c a g o , H u s h I leeves of Newton Theo-log ica l I n s t i t u t i o n , a n d P r o f . T h a y e r of Ya l e , who r e g a r d s the b o o k a s a n a p o l o g u e o r r e l i g i o u s nove l , t h e his-t o r i c e l e m e n t b e i n g I n d e t e r m i n a b l e . In s u m m a r i z i n g t he se o p i n i o n s tho e d i t o r s a y s t h a t the l a n g u a g e of C h r i s t a s r eco rded by M a t t h e w in no way g i v e s h i s s a n c t i o n t 6 t he view t h a t the" B o o k of J o n a h Is h i s t o r y . P r o f . M c G a r v e y succeeds In s h o w i n g t h a t t he n o t i o n s of these theo loRues , bes ides bo ing h a r s h l y d i s c o r d a n t , m a k e a l a r g e r d r a f t on o u r f a i t h t h a n d o e s tho t r a d i -t i o n a l view t h a t J e s u s o u r L o r d be-lieved in t he ex i s t ence of a v e r i t a b l e J o n a h
I n t b e s e c o n d p a p e r .Mr. M c G a r v e y e x -a m l n e s / V . / Drittr on Jomh. T h i s review Is t o us less s a t i s f a c t o r y t h a n the f o r m e r .
" I s t h e S t o r y of J o n a h I n c r e d i b l e " is the b e s t of these a r t i c l e s , e v i n c i n g a c o m p r e h e n s i v e a n d v i g o r o u s g r a s p on the s u b j e c t , a t t he s a m e t i m e a v o i d i n g a l l v e r b a l finesse. I t s c a r e f u l p e r u s a l will p r o v e h e l p f u l b o t h t o t he b e l i e v e r and t h e skep t i c In a l l a v l n g s o m e of the p e r p l e x i t i e s t h a t p re o c c u p y the mind In r e a d i n g t h i s fish s t o r y , a s It Is s o m e t i m e s p r o f a n e l y ca l l ed .
In r e g a r d t o the l a s t d i s c u s s i o n In th i s vo lume , we h a v e to say t h a t wha t -ever In It Is t r u e Is no t new, a n d t h a t the new Is not t rue . P r o f . M c G a r v e y sets h imsel f to e x p l a i n l a n g u a g e which he r e g a r d s as pur.zl lng t o m a n y mod-
i e rn r e a d e r s : v U , the c o n t r a r i e t y be-I tween t h e p r ed i c t i on of C h r i s t , t h a t a s
J o n a h w a s t h r ee d a y s a n d t h r e e n i g h t s In t h e w h a l e ' s be l ly , so s h a l l t b o S o n of . M a n b o t h r c e d a y s a n d t h r e e n i g h t s in the h e a r t of the e a r t h ; a n d the f a c t t h a t Bo was bur i ed on F r i d a y e v e n i n g a n d a r o s e f r o m tho d e a d o n S u n d a y m o r n -ing. T h e q u e s t i o n is , how c a n t h i s pe r iod bo t<irturcd in to thre«>i d a y s a n d th ree n i g h t s , a s we m o d e r n s u n d e r -s t a n d t h o s e e x p r e s s i o n s .
Now, It m i g h t bo answered In t h e g r o s s , t h a t t h o h o s t i l e J e w s , who know a l l a b o u t tho p r ed i c t i on of tho C h r i s t o n t h i s s u b j e c t , a s well a s a l l tho o i r c u m s t a n c c s of h ' s i n t e r m e n t a n d r i s i n g a g a i n , u n q u o s t l o n i n g l y a c c e p t e d the f a c t s a s b o i n g In i>orfcct a c c o r d with the p r e d i c t i o n , a n d t h a t , t o o , whothor roforonoe bo b a d t o o n e f o r m of ex p r c s s l o n o r a n o t h e r . In t h e i r mind tiio d u r a t i o n of J o s u s In tho t o m b d id n o t con i l l c t with " t h r e e d a y s a n d t h r e e n i g h t s , " o r " a f t e r t h r e o d a y s , " o r " o n the t h i r d d a y . " T o them t h o s e t h r o e p h r a s e s were e q u i p o l l e n t . I t s eems novor t o h a v o en te red tho b e a d of f r i e n d s o r foes , t h o u g h t hey s o o f t e n s o u g h t o p p o r l o n l t y t o o n t a n g l e t b o M a s -ter , t h a t tho f a c t s were o u t of j o i n t with b i s p r e d i c t i o n .
W i t h r e f e r e n c e t o w h a t exegetf lshi iTO wr i t t en In o x j i l a n a t l o n of t h i s t i m e p e r i o d , P r o f . M c G a r v e y s a y s t h a t , s ince m o s t of t h e a t t e m p t s t o s h o w t h a t t he r e Is n o r e a l o o n t r a d lo t ion be tween t h e s t a t e m e n t s a n d the f a c t s h a v e p r o v e d unsBtUfaeUicy , ho m a k e o a n -o t h e r a t t e m p t , wbUih hT t r u s t s w i l l b « s u p p o r t e d by uompoten t a n d suf l le len t
evldonoe. W a i v i n g f o r t he p r e s e n t tho p a r a g r a p h t o which wo a r o g o i n g t o d e m u r , wo c a n n o t see t h a t ho o f f e r s a n y t h i n g new in his s o l u t i o n of t h e a p p a r e n t di f l lcul ty . A g l i m p s e a t t h e l i t e r a t u r e of tho s u b j e c t will l ipar o u t t h i s s t a t emen t . T h a t p l o d d i n g D u t c h s c h o l a r a n d e m i n e n t j u r i s t , G r o t i u s . g ives t h e ke rne l of tbo nu t , s t a t i n g («I loc, t h a t wi th t he J e w s even a »emUtora ( h a l f - h o u r ) was coun ted in f o r a fu l l d a y . a n d then , c i t i n g tho j u r i s c o n s u i P a u l u s , he a d d s t h a t t he I t o m a n s a l s o h a d a s i m i l a r method of c o m p u t i n g t ime (siiiiifis Itomnui jnriM locuiio). In-deed Ib is r o so lu t l on of tlie m a t t e r Is o l d , a m p l e , a n d e v e r y way s a t i s f a c t o r y .
But when the P r e s i d e n t of t he B lb l e Co l l ege of Ken tucky Un ive r s i t y seeks c o n f i r m a t i o n of t h i s mode of expres -s ion by I n t r o d u c i n g some u n h e a r d - o f ' u s a g e of J ewi sh w r i t e r s , ' ' we flatly
deny the v a l i d i t y of h i s a^tsumed c a n o n In o r d e r Ui c o n t r a c t t he ex-p r e s s i o n t h r ee d a y s and th ree n i g h t s i-o a s Uj m a k e It t a l ly with the l eng th of t ime J e s u s w a s In the tomb, he s t a t e s t h a t "wt ien J e w i s h wr i t e r s wished t o be e x a c t In t he use of tbo c a r d i n a l n u m b e r s fo r y e a r s , m o n t h s , e tc . , t hey used the q u a l i f y i n g t e rm full o r whole befo re t he s u b s t a n t i v e . " Our b ro t l i e r thence c o n c l u d e s t h a t , " I d view of t h i s u s a g e , If J e s u s h a d m e a n t t h a t be would h a v e l)e< n in t he h e a r t of t h e e a r t h t h r ee d a y s a n d t h r e e e igh t s , a s we un-d e r s t a n d the words , he would h a v e sa id t h r e e full <1 Ay a and n i g h t s . " If t h i s a r g u m e n t were not f a l l a c i o u s , It would , wo ?oofe»8, h a v e coDclus lve f o r e - a* rhowi t ig t ha t Je^u8 did n o t mean th r ee /ull dtvjs aud niijhls. B u t a f t e r u n g a u d lov ing t-tudy of t h e L i v i n g O r a c l e s in the o r i g i n a l l a n g u a g e s , with t h e best a n ^ h e o l o g i c a l , g r a m m a t i c a l a n d lexica l b t lp« . we a r c bo ld to aff i rm t h a t P r o f . M c G a r v e y is s imply m i s t a k e n . T h e f a c t s of t h e l a n g u a g e w a r r a n t no such c a n o n of c r i t i c i sm.
T o be sure , o c c a s i o n a l l y a n o u n de-no t ing a g iven pe r iod of t ime m a y be e m p h a s i z e d by some q u a l i f y i n g a d -jec t ive : a s In tho Mosa ic law t h e r i g h t of r e d e e m i n g a c i ty h o u s e which h a d been so ld c o n t i n u e d a ) M y e a r . A n d l .uke s a y s t h a t P a u l a n d B a r n a b a s met with the c h u r c h a t A n t i o c h a t r W c y e a r , a n d t h a t P a u l dwel t two vhole y e a r s in h i s own h i red b o u s e . T h e s e a r o a l m o s t t h e o n l y e x a m p l e s in t h e New T e s t a m e n t in which y e a r a n d y e a r s a r e t h u s modi f ied , whi le in-s t adcos of t h e n o u n a l o n e a r e very n u m e r o u s . B u t two o r th reo i n s t a n c e s , p a i n f u l l y g l e a n e d f r o m a s c o r e o r s co re s of c o u n t e r o n e s , c a n n o t e s t a b -l ish a l a w of c r i t i c i s m , n o r , f o r t h a t m a t t e r , a n y o t h e r law.
It i t were B i b l i c a l u s a g e t o wr i t e a full y e a r when a y e a r Is m e a n t , It would fo l low t h a t a y e a r wou ld n o t d e s i g n a t e a y e a r w i t h o u t s o m o p r e fixed w o r d t o e n l a r g e tho s p h e r e of i t s m e a n i n g . B u t c x a m p l o t cou ld l>e a d -duced ad nauncam wboroln t h e n a k e d noun s lgnl f los t h o c o m p l e t e p e r i o d des-igna ted . I s i t n e c e s s a r y to s a y , when J e s u s w a s full twelve y e a r s o l d , o r a f t e r t w o full y e a r s , T l t u* c a m e lnu> F e l i x ' s r o o m ? Twelve y e a r s m e a n s twelve y e a r s . I n d o Q ^ t e n c s s o r Inex-a c t n e s s Is n o t g c n n r a l l v e x p r e s s e d by tho b a r e n o u n , b u t by somo a d d i t i o n a l p a r t i c l e . L u k e wr i tes t h a t A n n a w a s of g r e a t a g o , a n d h a d llvod with a h u s b a n d soven y e a r s f r o m h o r v i r g i n -i t y . D o s i r i n g t o a p p r o x i m a t e h e r g r o a t a g o m o r e o lo to ly , tho h i s t o r i a n a d d s t h a t s h e w a s a b o u t ( h m i ) eight}--f o u r . IToro seven y e a r s Is t o bo t a k e n f o r soven y e a r s , a n d a'wiii e i g h t y - f o u r y e a r s means o l g b t y - f o u r , trwre o r l a u . Or , t o gonera l lEe , whon a n y of t he se t ime n o u n s — y e a r , m o u t h , week, d a y -Is t o bo t a k e u ' l n a l lml ied s e n s e , r e a -s o n s m u s t In e v e r y c a s e b e a d d u c e d f o r s u c h l i m i t a t i o n s . W i t h o u t s u c h r e s l r l o t l on , a y e a r m u s t bo hold t o s i g -n i f y a y e a r , a m o n t h t o s i g n i f y a
nil
B A P T I S T A N D R E F L E C T O R , M A R C H 2 6 , l b 9 7 .
monlh , etc W i l l It be orolended
that whole or full mua» be urefixed to
each of the four noun« employed by
•liihn U< nil m i l the i.paep of l ime whirh i
llioy r.-p'-'-llv.-lv Intlli-a'ey • Ami the j
fiMir mdim I . l"<'-«'il wblch w>'r«'
n iiiMiiiti. Hiul n wn-- i<' fla> ihi' Uilrd
(lari of men
Slnt-e Mr MoCJiirvcy alai» a t tb«
ciillehteDtneDi of hl« readers OD the
meaning of the word duy, one natura l ly
looks for a pretty ful l e *h lb l l of ex-
amples wherein the nouns day and
days arc *o aropllfled a t to e t t ab lUh
or, at least, to give stronif colorlnif to
thU assumed usatre ThU. however,
he baa not done, and a Kl lmpte at a
concordance ahows that It cannot be
done. There may arlae special rea-
Kona for dealpoat lnu a ichoU day . aa.
when the househo'der, after havtnf;
none out at the th ird , the alxth, the
ninth, and the eleventh hour, a t lenj^h
opnsurlnij ly asked. W h y atand ye
here the irh»U day id le?" And yet. aa
an obv ious matter of fact, the whoU
lUvj. as here used, embraces fewer
hours than the simple woni day In a
precedlni; verse. For those who had
been all d»y Idle went to work at the
eleventh hour, and received generous
waives, whereas when the houaeholder
went out early In the morn l nc to hire
Idborers Into his v lneyan l , he ajfreed
with them for a penny a day ; that la.
for the twelve hours work It thus
appears that day here, with no en-
la re lnp adjective, designates a ful l
day of twelve hours: wherea* <rhoU
•lay as here employe«3 denotes Ui." than
twelve hours. So far. therefore, from
sustalnlnir the c la im of our good
brother, l i Is at open war with such
usaire.
Passing from day to year, our ex-
tcellent brother Is equal ly unfortunate
l i n the first example adduced from the
New Testament. He wrltea: • 'Stephen
says that Moses was fi<// forty years
old when he slew the Kgyptlan " But
Ibis I l lustrat ion fal ls to I l lustrate
There Is D O t h l n g in the o r ig i na l to
justify the rendering fuU To ou r
mind forty years exactly reflects the
Greek Indeed, had our cr i t ical frienb
opened either of the late Eng l ish ver-
sions. he would have discovered that
each of them so far from prefixing the
/j/.m sign before forty years, actua l ly
places the mimir. the Canterbury ver-
sion trans lat ing . When he was mil-
niijh for t / years old. and tha t of the
A B. Union , When he was ntarly f o r t / ,
the two adverbs being t an tamoun t
Here, therefore, la a diminuendo in
place of our fr iend's rrtscendo. H i s
first l l lustra i lve example. Instead of
mak i ng for h im . i s wholly aga ins t blm.
The Greek expression which be ho lds
to mean ful l forty years, the best and
most devout rcho larsh lp of the age
combined tranolate ntarly forty years.
It goes without say ing that any con-i
tentlon with the higher critics must be
based on a severely d iscr im ina t ing
study of the o r i g i na l Greek and He-
brew For iliMUi;h wu by no means
accord to the-e gentlemen a monopo ly
of Bib l ica l learn ing , wo freely own
that they are not lacklne In broad and
minuto eao'-'.'d rcholarship , being lit-
tle behind the ve r f oh'of of the ortho-
dox apoiogUtf)
W e reiervo our notice of t 'rof. Mc-
( ia rvey 's Hebrew orltivi-ms for, an-
other paper. No r can wo liere with-
hold thb remark , that , if a weak argu-
ment Is hurt fu l to any cau ie , an erro-
neous onp l<t much more so.
P&ris, Ky .
- K e v . A. C D ixon , of B rook l yn ,
N Y . , and Evange l is t Wes ton Galea ,
of l i a le lgb , are o r gan l i l n g a Jo in t
stock cotopany to bui ld a labernadle
In Western Nor th Ca o i l n a to seat
a,000 people, whore Mr. D ixon pro
|ioses tu huii l a ten dnyR meeting
•very summer.
Our Field Editor'! Letter
HAHil ASSISLLTLONS-NO IV.
In a former number I have »hown
thiit ih« negroex «ere not debased, but
greatly elcvaiud civll lzcil . and many
were Cbr ls t i an l z .d by their •Iftvery to
Chr is t ian masters and l i v i ng In a
Chr is t ian land To show how much
their savage barbar i sm had been sof-
tened and changed by their contact
with a Chr is t i an c iv i l i za t ion , it is only
necessary to refer to the tact that
after their freedom was suddenly Riven
them by the victor ious Nor thern army ,
they manifested no host i l i tv to their
former masters; but acted In a much
more quiet and civlllKod manner than
did the lower classes of French only
a hundred years a g o c u r i n g " t he
reign of te r ror , " when they wore sud-
denly freed from bondage to priests,
nobles and kings. The French acted
like savages; the negroes l ike a quiet
and c iv i l peasantry, as the most of
them were, though uncultured But
for the Influence of the carpet baggers,
who rushed down U> the Sou th as soon
as the war ended, to usn the negroes
aa the monkey did the cat, to pul l ou t
pol i t ica l chestnuts for thum, we would
have had but little t rouble with ou r
former slaves. Some of the Northern
|)eople have found fau l t with them for
not mak ing more rapid mo ra l and
rel ig ious progress since their free-
dom only thirty years ago. They say
the negroes have little regard for the
mar r i age vow and many of them stil l
have a concubine Such persons for-
get that It has taken m»re than a
thousand years of Chr is t i an cul ture
to b r i ng the white race to their pres-
ent s tandard of fidelity to the mar-
r iage vow, and some whites are still
very loose In their mora ls on this
point .
Tae negroes are not as bad a* the
white Mormons who openly advocated
and practiced po lygamy ti l l President
Cleveland, du r i ng his first term of
otllce, ordered his judges to rend
them to the penitentiary for It, Their
bead man , B r l gbam Young , a nat ive
of ou r own Tennessee, had to run away
and keep h id In the I locky Moun ta i ns
t i l l bis death to prevent being sent t o
the penitent iary for being over-much
marr ied—wi th nineteen wives.
'Tls true, some negroes, as asserted,
do sometimes leave one wife and take
up with another , which seems to shock
some of ou r Northern brethren. Bu t
we can lu form them tha t many North-
ern white men do the same, with only
th i t difl'erence. The white man pays
a lawyer a l ibera l fee to a r r ange the
matter of leav ing his first wife so tha t
he can take up with another woman ,
without any trouble; while the negro
avo ids this expense by a r r ang i ng h is
ma t r imon i a l a l l iances to su i t himself ,
wi thout consu l t ing a lawyer.
T o show wha t re l ig ious progres i
toey have made in thirty years from
their bondage I will s u t e tha t there
are 1,351,790 negroes in Bap t i s t
Churches, and qui te a number in the
Methodist and other churches. 1 con-
fidently affirm the negroes h ave made
more mora l and rel ig ious progress in
these thirty years than the Jews did In
hundreds u f years after the ir freedom
from Egyp t i an bondage. J u s t look a t
their greatest man So i umon In a l l h i s
g lory. He had 700 wives a nd .'H)0 con-
cubines, and became so corrupted by
as ioo la t ing with thoae heathen wives
be erected Ido l temples Iq the olty u t
Jerusaleui Itself, where the a r k u ( tied
dwelt. There Is not a respeotable ne-
g r o church In the Sou th today t ha t
would tolerate So lomon as a ohviroh
member. I f he were In ' their churoh
with his 700 wives thuy would t u rn
h i m ou t the first ohuroh meeting. I
h ave known them to depose more t h an
one preacher ft-om the min is t ry , » •
soon as they got posit ive proof t ha t
he was ffUlUy of adultery.
These faots show tha t negro churoh-
ea, with a l l their short comings , are
oven ahead of So l omon in true reli-
gious mora l s , t hough they have been
out o f bondage on ly thirty years.
The negro Bapt is t Churches of the
South in some thinifs are ahead of iho
whiles. They g ive more for o i i s t i rns
and pas tora l support in propor t ion to
their ab i l i ty than the white Bapt is ts
Their pastors have U u g b t and trained
them a i l to g ive something every t ime
they meet for pub l ic worsh ip ; while
many of our white churches g ive noth-
ing for miss ions and other benevolent
objects. There Is not an infidel, skep-
t lo ,orh lgher cri t ic among the negroes;
but many such among the whites,
especially a t the North. They u k e
the Bib le just as It roads, and believe
every word from Genesis to the end of
I levelat lon
The evangel ist , D, L. Moody , tells
the fo l lowing Incident i l lustrat ive of
this t ra i t in tlieir character:
W h i l e M r Moody was ho l d i ng a
meeting In HIchmond, V i r g i n i a , he
preached one Sunday af ternoon to that
large Bapt is t membership In the First
Afr ican Bapt i s t Church. Hav i n g
learned that the mo«t of the negroes
In the city and State were Baptists, he
asked one of their deacons the cause
of it. He replied. ' W o have not much
learn ing and have to take the B ib le
just as It reads. When the B ib le says,
•We are burled with b lm In bapt i sm, '
we just th ink it means that , and when
It says 'They both went down Into the
water and he baptized b lm—and they
came up out of the water, ' we jus t
t h l nk l tmeans that . Y o u see, we haven ' t
education enough to exp la in that It
means someth ing else, l ike some of
you white fo lks have. And that Is the
reason so many of us are Bapt is ts ,
W e have to take the B ib le just as it
r e ads . "
Mora l—But for their l ong coiitact
with their Chr i s t i an masters and join-
ing Chr is t ian churches, whore they on-
joyed the same preaching and the
same church ordinances and Influences
as their masters did. It would have
been a mora l Imposs ib l i l ty , human ly
speaking, for the savage negroes to
have made such rapid progress In
thirty years of freedom.
A B. CAIIA.VIBS.
Facta for Tenneuee Baptlsu.
The depressing debt on ou r Foreign
Miss ion work has been s tand ing now
for several years. Some j o a r s a g o
the Convent ion Instructed the Foreign
Boa rd to increase the number of mis-
sionaries on the fields, Th is was done,
but Just then the financial stress came
and a debt was the result. Tbe receipts
of the Boa rd a t present are enough to
pay a l l current expenses, and if there
was no debt o u r work would be in
good cond i t ion . Tbe results on tbe
Fore ign J e l d s a re g lor ious . B u t with
the debt and heavy interest to pay the
Board Is pnivented from even sending
back to their work some of ou r best
missionar ies who had come home to
recuiierato and rutt The In iertst on
the debt U enough to suppor t several
miss ionar ies . Ou r people ough t not
to a l l ow this state o f th ings to exist
longer. I t Is c rush ing to tbe sp i r i t of
the mlHslonaries. I t Is hamper i ng the
work, i t Is d i shonor i ng the Master.
A p l an has been devised whereby we
can pay every do . l a r by M a y 1st. The
amoun t needed to pay a l l r u n n i n g ex-
penses for the year and a i l Indebted
ness has been d iv ided a m o n g tbe
States; Tennessee has been asked'for
•7,800. U p tu 'Maroh 13, 1807, 13,800
had been received In R i c h m o n d . Th i s
leaves 13,044 to ba pa id by May 1st
There Is p robab ly a good a m o u n t
besides which has been Riven but no t
forwarded to H iohmond by the var ious
olerks and treasurers a l l over the
State. B u t even oouDtlng this and
ca lcu la t ing by receipts of former years,
wo will go to o u r Conven t ion In W l l
mlngton with a debt of p robab ly 120. (MMi
unless ou r people ra l ly .
Let not Tennessee bo the State i<i
fa l ) , and thnH prevent the debt from
lielng pa id . A thousand of h e p n e n
and women pnn g lvo extra f rom one to
ion do l lars each. Besides, every pas
t<»r can take this regular colletaion,
and thun ra ise In add i t i on from one
to ten or twenty do l l a rs W o have
few enough miss ionar ies now; shall
we keep somo of the best of those at
homo? Tho Board Is iiowerless U) send
the miss ionar ies unless wo vote by
ou r gifts and say otberwiso Thoy are
r ight In not Increasing tho force aH
long as wo are in dolit. i^ot overy
pastor and every one who reads this
send an extra gift at onco Let no
one say, I can do no th ing , but lot
every one take part .
Ellzabethton Items
X X
Bro J o h n T H ickman lllloil his
regular appo in tment bore Sunday
Largo conKregat lons wore prosent at
each service. t>n Monday evening at
7;;U)o'cUH;k seven c«»nvertB wore bap
tlzed in ihe new poo l which ou r church
has Just bui l t .
Oa r church has grown rap id ly un-
der the care of Bro. H ickman . ' Wh«n
he came to <>ur town two years and ,
a half a g o we had a lwu t forty
members, now we have 107. W e con-
sider Bro. Htekman one of tho l>eiti
young preachers In K.aslTonnessee As
a revival ist he ha t a few equals , l ie
a l so has splendid social qual i t ies .
This will iKsrhaps be his last service
In our town. He has been called to
somo churches near Knoxv i l l e Our
church regrets very much to lose h im,
If he has u> go, Bro H i ckman has
endeared himself to our people, and It
seems as If wo canno t g lvo b lm up
Kilzabethton Is a p romis ing field,
and we hojie soon to see ou r church
one of the lead ing churches of Upp«?r
East Tennessee
For a long t ime tho Bap t i s t causo In
ou r Utwn was in the background , and
It seemed as If the lltt lo handfu l of
members would have U> d i sband . But
the State Boa rd came to tbelr lollef
and sent Dr . J o h n T. K Incanon , the
great church-bouso bu i lder of this
mounta in country , to their a id . In
four years ho had bu i l t a splendid
houso with a seat ing capac i ty of 4(Mi
Dr . K Incanon . th ink ing tha t his work
was llnlshod hero, redened . After ii
few mo'iths » o cal led ou r pre-< nt |IH -
t o ' , who h a t so wonderful ly bu i l t u|i
o u r church lAMES D IKNKINH
KliZ4bethton, Tonn.
Who will l ikewise?
An honored brmhor of LaGrange ,
Mo . , who was for several years a ntii-
dent In the The<ilogical Seminary , haw
lately returned th<» entire amoun t of
tho assistance tha t was bestowed upon
b lm by the Student 's Fund W r i i i n g
under da te of J a n . 20, 1807. he -ay-:
"Tne Ijorti has prospered im;. I
now ab le to i lnlsh p a y i n g my bon'-<i
o i l l which you so kindly advanced f»r
me. Enclosed you will Hod the ontiro
amoun t t ha t remains, namely , $00 2ft
Y o u wil l k i nd ly receive and receipt
t ho «amo , and may It bo used to help
some other worthy brother to bettor
prepare himself for the preauhing of
the G o s p e l . "
There a re n iany brethren in dilTcr-
ent por t ions of the country who have
likewise ob ta i ned assistance from the
S t u d e n t s A i d F u n d . , I t would b o a
very great k indness and assistance if
others of them would remember us at
th is t ime and return the money , either
In who leor In par t , i t would cost them
but l i t t le saorlQce and would afford
muoh rel ief to us. W h o .wi l l be the
Qrst to respond?' • WM. H . WHITBITT.
Lou isv i l l e , K y ,
BAPTIST AND REFI .ECTOR, MARCH 26. 1897.
NEWS NOTES.
PASTORS' CONFEHENCE REPORT.
^ua i i v l i l o .
First Churoh—Preach ing by pastor
Hawthorne In tbe morn i ng and Uro.
l larnolt at n ight . Th is was Dr. Haw
iliorno's first sermon In three months,
ilu was rejoiced to Itj back to h is
work, and says he has fully rooovered
his health. Organ ized young iioople's
muetlng. 220 In S. S. and HI In An-
son Nelson .Mission S. S.
Cent ra l—Pastor Lof ton preached.
i ;ood congregat ions . Excellent young
Iteoplo's meeting Fr iday night 370 In
S . 9 .
Th i rd—Pas tor W . f . ( io iden preach-
id Good audiences Ouo baptlzod.
(;ood young people's meeting. Mis-
sionary mass meeting at 3 o'clock
next Sunday for women only. 192 In
S. S.
M g o f i o l d - P a s t o r Uust preached.
Changed youi ig people's meeting from
Thursday n igh t to Sunday night.
North Edgef ie ld- i ' as tor Sherman
pruachcd. Good day . lUjcolved three
by letter I l emarkab lo S 8. rally In
tiio afternoon 170 In S. 8.
Kalnos Avenue M i s s i on—Bro Mar-
tin preached at night. ( ;ood S. 8.
Cen tenn i a l - l ' a s t o r W . ( ' C leveland
preached. Had ful l S. S.
Howoll M e m o r i a l - P a s t o r Burns
preached Usua l services 0.5 In S, S
Mil l Creek—Pastor Price preached.
Usual services. .10 in S. S. (SO at
Una,
First, Edgefield ( c o l . ) - P a « o r Van-
davell preached. Meeting in prog-
ress conducted by Bro . Mason Pas-
tor preached, 124 In S . 8
Mt. ZIon (co l ) -Pa s t o r Mason
preached. G o o d services.
Dr. Fros ts jwko of b is great satisfac-
tion In hav i ng tho I 'astors ' Conference
meet In the pa r lo r of the 8. 8 rooms.
Dr. Hawthorne said t ha t tho house of
tho Sunday school Board of tho South-
ern Bapt is t Convent ion was the on ly
house of their own that Southern Bap-
tists have,
—When wo are too busy to bo so-
ciable and wi thout t ime to be holy we
neither enjoy the society of friends nor
the rel igion of Jesus Christ, L«t us
remember th is seven days In overy
week P^RANK M, WELLS.
N. Y . Ha l l , I ^ u l s v l l l e , Ky
- H e v . A J . Ho l t , D .D . , of Nash-
ville, Tonn , wil l preach for the peo-
ple of Doy le and vicinity In Col lege
hal l on Wednesday n ight , March Slst,
Bro, Ho l t wi l l bo in Doy le in the in-
terest of Sunday-school and Colpor-
tage work in Un ion Associat ion. Let
everybody hear h im . A .
—Tliere were large audiences at Red
Ulver church yesterday and last n ight .
The old men say the congregat ions
wore never better nor the condit ion of
tho churoh as good as now In twenty-
flvo years. Tho Sunday-school con-
tinues a l l t h rough the winter months
and tbe col lect ions are more then suf-
ficient to run tho school , so they have
decided to g ive overy fifth Sunday
collection to the O rphans ' Home. W o
are gett ing on progressive grounds
now, and may the L o r d help us to got
higher. .
—Sharon churoh observed Col lege
Day on S unday , the 14th, with very
gra t i fy ing results. A smal l col lect ion
WIUJ several pledges was taken. I be-
lieve several fr iends enlisted for o u r
muoh beloved ool lege (Carson and
Newman) , R e v . J . E . J ohnson of
Mossy Greek was with us and gave us
an enthusiast ic sermon for the oooa-
slon. S h a r on Is s lowly but steadi ly
coming to the front. May the bless-
ings of Qod be on ou r State paper.
B . L . BTAMWIX.
Pedliro, Tenn .
— W o bad the best day yesterday
that wo have had since I came to Ath-
ens 104 In Sunday-school. The be-
loved Stale Secretary was with us and
preached two excellent sermons. His
sermon In the morn i ng on Missions
stirred our hearts. Tbe collection at
n ight for missions was 110.45. One
has been received for baptism since
last report. T, G , D .
Athens, Tonn., March 22nd,
— We had a very pleasant day at
Ant locb Sunday . A good congrega-
tion was present. I preached on the
subject of Repentance. 1 believe the
Holy Sp i r i t directed tho sermon to the
hearts of many present. Dr . Frost,
ou r beloved secretary of the Sunday-
school Board , will preach for us tbe
th ird Sunday In Apr i l . W e are look-
ing forward to bis coming with great
pleasure. Pra ise ye the Ixird evermore.
J . H. PIERCE.
Wroncoe, Tonn.
—I spend two weeks in each month
a t Winchester. Th ings ara mov ing
on pleasant ly. Sunday-school good,
superintended by Bro. A . S . Hodges,
the efficient pr inc ipa l of the pub l ic
school." Yesterday I baptized bis wife,
a very est imable lady. Two received
by letter, one from the church at Hunts-
vl l le , A l a . , and one from New Hope
church, Kentucky. A good list for the
Foreign Mission Journal goes up in a
few days. If tbe brethren were as en-
thusiast ic as their wives and daughters
ou r churches would much more nearly
approx ima te their miss ion in the world.
ENOCH WINDES.
Lascassas, Tenn.
—A good day at North Fork Church
Sunday , I preached to a good con-
gregat ion a t 11 o'clock. Had churoh
conferenceon Sa t u rday . W e separat-
ed feeling very much st imulated. W e
have l a to red together as church and
pastor for several years, and our every
effort du r i ng the t ime has been crowned
with success This churoh is wide
awake as t o tbelr duty of g iv ing . They
have given to our Orphanage since
Chr is tmas 112 60, for which we have
received receipts. Ou r collections are
good at each service. No, brethren,
there's n o anti-spirit lurk ing In our
camps. " J u d g e a tree by It 's f r u i t s . "
C. V. HALE.
Shelbyvl l le , Tenn. ^
—The Lord met with us at Esti l l
Spr ings churoh Sunday . The writer
preached a t 11 o 'c lock, held a young
people's service a t 3 p. m. and preach
ed aga i n a t 7 p . m. to good congrega-
t ions . I was pastor hero for nearly
five years. I resigned In November,
1805, and was cal led and accepted tbe
work aga i n In November, 1806. This
Is a promis ing field for Bapt ists . W o
are comparat ive ly few In numbers
but sound and strong In faith. W e
have moved ou r place o f worship
f rom tbe o ld d i lap idated church In tbe
country to tho v i l lage, where wo have
a good house. W e enter our new
house with renewed energies.
C. V. HALE. Shelbyvl l le , Tenn.
• —Tho cop ious spr ing showers with
a ba lmy breoie were with us yesterday
and this morn ing . D r . W . C. Grace
gave to h is listeners a strong and Im
presslve sermon on the sin of gam-
b l ing . Th i s sermon, no doubt , wi l l
cause many to t h i nk much on this
great ev i l of tbe ago. W e are .well
pleased with ou r pastor, D r . Oraee,
and his nob le wife and chi ldren.
We l l , when a ohuroh has a good pas-
tor keep h im. Th is Is what I th ink .
I a m one of those poor laymen who
believes In keeping a good man for
pas tora l work. B u t then tbe quest ion
oomes, How can we keep ou r devoted
leader in ou r Lo rd ' s a rmy? I answer,
by i b dw i ng k l m o u r oheerfulnesi
towards h i m a nd by heart i ly inpport-
Ing h im with our means. If our pas-
tors are worried over tbelr financial
condit ion and feel deprossed, how can
they give proper study to the W o r d of
God and other questions? W e can
pay our pastors easily enough if we
but try. Brother laymen, let us try
and save some earn ings and thus keep
our ob l igat ions to the Lord square,
and thus make ou r pastor feel that he
Is working in the Interest of a church
that appreciates him. Pray for our
protracted mooting, W . A. McD .
Sweetwater, Tenn.
—1 preached my first sermon yester-
day morn ing as pastor of Smlthwood
Bapt is t Church , Foun ta in City, Tenn.
The congregat ion was large and at-
tentive. I regard Founta in City as
being a very Important field. Some-
time ago I was called by tbe Johnson
City Church, but declined the ca l l in
favor of tho church referred to above.
The congregat ion at n ight was large
and made up largely of youn«^ people.
One add i t ion at the morn ing scrvlce.
i[ will move to Founta in City tbe first
of May . Th is year I will preach to
Third Creek, Is land Home and Smith-
wood cburches* which br ings my work
to one ne ighborhood, and 1 want to
c la im that it Is one of tbe best fields
in East Tennessee.
JOHN T. HICKMAN
Mossy Creek, Tenn.
—I wish to commend to publ ic fa-
vor the work of H. R . McLendon. Daw-
son, Ga , , entit led, " T b e B ib le on
B a p t i s m . " I t is an exhaustive treat-
ment of the subject from the stand-
point of every o r i g i na l word In tbe
languages In which tbe B ib le was
written, which inc lude and relate to or
exp la in tbe mean ing of the Greek word
"baptixo," with a comparat ive treat-
ment of the subject a t tbe hands of the
most eminent authori t ies known to
Old and New Testament exegesis and
history. I t Is scho lar ly , expert and
conclusive, it seems to me; and so
conveniently arranged and so lucidly
discussed tha t it becomes an invalu-
able aid to every student of Greek and
Hebrew a l ong this l ice of study. Every
young preacher especially ough t to
have a copy of It.
GEO A. IJOFTON,
How to Give Something.
I have Just been to Pleasant G rove
Church , which is pastored by Bro .
McCarter of Carson and Newman Col-
lege, Tho church adopted tbe system
at lc p lan of giv-ing, and a p p o i n t s a
lady as collector. On the Z ls t inst . the
churoh observed "Co l l ege D a y " and
made a reasonable collection for the
Inst i tut ion. They have organized a
Sunday-school and are go i ng to go
forward and upward to better th ings.
Now In regard to the " h o w " I want
you to l isten to a few facts. A Mr .
Fieldon on tho th ird Sa turday in last
Ap r i l gave one hen to tbe miss ion
work. He sot he'r every t ime tha t she
went to sett ing since then, and now he
has forty hens which he will sell next
month and g lvo tho proceeds to the
var ious missions. Now will any one
say he can ' t g ive any th ing to the
Lo rd ' s work? I f th is brother, who
can ' t walk ou t of the house, oan g ive
this muoh, surely any one oan d o this
muoh. Now don ' t say you oan ' t , bu t
If you wil l not g ive Just say you wi l l
not, and then we wil l know how tu
take you.
W h i l e I was in th is houso I th ink I
had a foretaste of heaven as I llstet.sd
a t th is afflicted and aged brother talk
of heaven and h i s hope of go i ng home
when be departed th i s life o f sorrow
and pa in . Brethren, may the Lo r d
qu icken o u r bearto and awaken us so
t ha t we m a y see our duty , a n d may
we have the conrai« to do it, and ra-
Joloe In do i ng so. May God s bless-
ings rest on hlo people, and eh|N!uiaily
on tbe sick ones. E, A . CATE, Colpt .ru r
Minltteriai Reoeiptt.
Rece lpU of Min ister ia l Boa rd a t
Jackson for the m o n ^ of J a n u a r y
and February :
Gravel H i l l churoh, t2; M Idd leburg
churoh, (6; Clover Creek churoh, 11.25;
C larksv l l le churoh, •34.80; Oak l and
church, 11.50; Mercer churoh, 93.75;
Mrs. N. B , W i l l i ams , 50 cenU; Sauls-
bury church, 13 80; Mllanchurch,«10,76,
Bradford church, 18,53; Prov is ions
shipped by the I . C. Ra i lway . 111.25;
Fleetwood Ba l i , 15; a friend a t Gran-
berry, 12; Pocahontas churoh, t5 ;
Jackson First churoh, 134.05; a reader,
I I ; M V, Exom, 16.64; Mrs. E B .
McHenry, 15; Dyersburg church, 912;
Map le Spr ings churoh, 92 45; B i g
Sp r i ng cburcb, 912; a friend at Ripley,.
Tenn. , 95; Pop l a r Grove churoh, 91.50;
Oak Grove churoh, 93; She lbyv l l le
chu ioh , 922; Lewlsburg churoh, 93;—
Tota l 9210.54. W e thank warmly a l l
these fr iends.
The expenses for those two months
were: For J a nua r y , 9108 75; for Feb-
ruary , 9120.64.—Total, 9208.39. These
have been our heaviest months. The
magn i tude of the work done will more
clearly appear when it is stated that
for the long , cold months of J a n u a r y
board was only 97.75; and for Feb-
ruary , 96.76. W e have tried to exer-
cise caut ion to help only those who
could not help themselves.
To i l lustrate, 1 here append the
record of one, in regard to whom there
was doub t whether any help should be
rendered, and how much. Y o u can
Judge whether his record Justifies help.
He Is a member of L a v l n i a churoh,
which Is pastorless. He has received
935 since last September. He appl ied
It as fo l lows: Bough t one suit , 910 75;
one pa i r of shoes, 92.50; shirt and
col lars . 91 50; mend ing shoes, 91.25;
washing, 95 90; a t r ip home a t Christ-
mas , 60 cents; two matr icu la t ion fees,
910; and balance on last year to Univer-
sity, 92.50; thus u k l n g up the 935. He
is now without money, an o rphan ,
gives clear evidence of a ca l l to the
min is try , a nd is twenty years old. He
has kept this suit so neat that with
others l ike h im be has been though t
to dress too well to be on the Boa rd .
H is churoh attendance has been per-
fect, a l so tha t of Sunday-school . He
has missed one meeting of the J . R , G .
Society, ranks seventh In a class of
fifteen, and grades 60 In Improvement.
Has missed three meetings in his lit-
erary society, ranks eighth In a class
of eleven, and grades eighty In Im-
provement. There Is noth ing aga ins t
bis piety. He averages in his l i terary
studies for a l l h is elasses, for a l l the
year thus far, 85. Ho has miased n o
obapel service. He does not use to-
bacco; has been tardy twice. He d id
the preaching In two meetings l as t
summer, In one of which there were
fourteen conversions; in the other.
He has ono-sovcntb interest In a
smal l landed esUte of one hundred
acres, the rent of which Is now con-
sumed In the support of the youngest
ch i ld .
Though the Board Is In debt, a nd
J a n u a r y and February carried us
deeper i n to debt; yet if the subscrip-
t ions made for this Boa rd last summer
and fa l l be pa id , and the usua l amounts
received from others, we sha l l come
ou t o f tbe year wi thout debt.
O . M . SAVAQR.
—Tenderness does not mean weak-
ness, softness, effemlnateness. I t Is
consistent with strength, manl iness ,
truth and bravery I t does not show
itself a lone in the touoh, bu t In unsel-
flshness, tboughtfulness, oonsldrrate-
net*, forbearance, patience, iong-iuf-
fering.
B A P T I S T A M ) i n C F M X n o l l , M A I U ^ I I 2 5 , 1 8 9 7
t i ^
MISSIONS.
iiiNNi«i!> i>iit»;«vroii %
•ntc Mt»IOH<i.—Hnv A J HUM. U U Mliwloo»rj bcorej»ry All c<iinmuDtc»ttoii« arslgiieU tor bllc .bouM ue aailrCHHua to hlu) N»Bl)Vllle. Trnii W M Wooo OOOK. TpoiBurer N»!llivi:u<. Tenr.
»«rt>l«n nu»lon*>-)<cv K J Wii.i.inb UAM D l> CorrenpoiiiUnf! Becrciary, Ut:b mifiio. v» llev J U snow, Ktiuivillc. Ter.n . v icr-PrealUetit uf lb" rorolgc iloard tor Touiioi' ee, U) wtioru all InQUlriri. tor i rorinsttoii tc»y t>e »<l(lre»»i'il
Honir Wlii^loM^.-UtT 1 T Tiuuiwn D , CorrtHponiJlnK Secreiary Allsni* Ua Krv M l> J«rrillCS. Vlic I'rfniJeEl o( tbr Home Moara tor Tcr.iie»BCC. luwUuiii nil • nforuialloii or llllJuirle^ aouui "uru t ibf State mav aJJresset
ninlkiiTlit i KdiiinlioH. Ai. luuUs .or rouDg iiilt,l»tcr» lo ll.f !* H i Diver^Hv (hould t)B BEDi 10 ij M (>av»(;f UI- 1>. JackBur., rot.i, Tor youcK uiioleicr.. al C»r»oK »eit Vewicar t;iiiie«c nf ui' J T HPDitfrmx; MOBST L'rt -li T'11
«tr|ibMii*' Hotur. - riiU all iniii.it 1. .. A J WBfPier. Trianurer NastivUa Tci.n Al' HUpplles' nBouii! u» C T ( bceli
NanlnrUlt- Tent, Al Bupplle* ttoulti be prcpaiO
U M > I I U I I > NUATUTIARI I IIIU>I
PttB^IUIKl -Mri. A l' » JacMM'u n TEUL
JOBKlSPfNPmO S«UH9T*BT Mljin M M Olai borcp Maiwfil HOUHC NiuihvtUe. Tcnn
RlOOHIilSib S»V;ii«-tAHir .141M UtrlruUe mil. NasoUip Vctt.
EDIT>'B-Mr«. J (J Sa»fc« uir i i-l
Woman s Missionary Union.
— IVoirram (or April I**!"; SubjcTl,
C'bina
1 SlUnl jirayer for hifntntf i>r ihe
mtt-'tiDi: U. Siilriluttl Impulse I'-a Ixvli,
F'rai-«' rv cu
Scriiili 't! I'^H xv;
Hymn ' M) J. -u- i L .v- Thte "
Itfni — Kiflv jfiir- li^ii nil itie
Christians in ( bina m-t In one litile
rocim; now ther»; are '>0,(XiU. Sluoe
l^tia. ihf j havf IntTfaecd I. OO per
ccnt If thf-y KfH p un InorcaBltur in
the same ratio (an.J we tieliuve ihey
will) the Luxt ninety years will give us
Christians In China
7. Roll call. rtsponiJint'with an Item
atxiui China, Intfcrspi.Tsccl <vlth ulog-
\ In^ stanzas of hymn, Ttiu Mornlnp
Llffbt Is Breaking '
H. Chain of prayeru for the mlsglon-
arloH, converts and schools in China.
Let each select a missionary to pray
for at home during thu month.
9. leaflet—"Obittacles and Oppor-
lunltltig in China," by Kov. Howard
Wayno Smith. (To Ix) read In uec-
tlon.a by dllTfreDt |M;rBun».j
10. DiBcu88ion of tbu Icallct lie
port fiom Wcei< uf Bclf denial.
11. BUHIUCSS. Collection. Closing
hymn
—Dr. U. C. [leory has thu« gum-
marlzed tbo reasona for talcing a hope-
ful view of the outlook la China:
1 "The demand for a chanKo In tho
admlnlatratiuD of the contra! ifovoru-
room. A manlfoato linx already iK-en
is»uud, dcmandlue Incapable rulers;
(a ) a chanKO In tho cunntUulloual
Kovornmonl; the removal of Incapa-
bio rulor^; (c) thu removal of Ihu 'cuo'
an a sign of Kovernmonl allcKlanco;
(d) tbu pruh I billon uf itao praoitcu uf
foot binding; (e) tho prohibition of
opium amoklng; (/) tho protection of
a freo proai. Ttia«e involve fjreat
obanKOR. To Bocure tbom outaldo holp
!• required. A BrltlNh protoctorato
would bo a boom for China.
2. *'Tbo aringtruuitun of oxtonHive
railroads, lirlddoo, tjunnuli, cnnalB,
oto., is tandloK to upiot lioaibon bo>
lielf, and in utwnlnK to Curopo a
irade in China'* 34,000 square tniloauf
ooai beds, oil and miDerai produato,
•o that the development of the woalth
and Induitry of China is assured.
8. "ThaadopUonof Westanmwaiods
and ideas wHI hiilphor. Hheis K<:ttlni;
her eyed opened. lOducatlon Is ac-
knowledged UB of value and schooU
are in demand.
•». "Today China in beglnnhiK to
believe that Chrlbtianlty is a prime
factor in the protfi-cds of Western na-
tions.
5. "Her ap|H!nl to our mlsKonarlen
for a knowledge of sciencc, art, iitora-
ture and (jeneial learning is a hope
tul sijfn. • J/lKsiomiiv Jtirun'
Kven if the Chinese Kmplre nhould
brtak up, ttie work of mlsslonarloH
will not be lost. It may, in fact, be-
come increasingly fruitful. A writer
luthf Vu<t/fer/.v WeiHW says: "Itmay bo
iiuestloned whether a work «)f e«iual
iiniiortance to the Iranslation of tho
Scriptures into Weii-il by Morrison
aud Marshnian has o>'er been afconi-
piished in the annals of t hrisllan
literature. No country allorde in ex-
aaiple of a language Intvllielble across
an era larger thuD the continent of
Kurope amongst tho ruling class of a
quarter of the human raco. The Won-
li Is a script which has been coin-
pared to the dial of a clock thatnlgnl-
tles the hour alike to all Kuropean
(teoplfs, although French, Cierman
and KngiUh use ditTerent sounds in
telling the time aiouo. The eye of tho
reader follows it with equal under-
standing of Its meaning in the north
and south of China, but the reading of
it aloud by a Northerner Is unlnteiii-
ble to Southern ears. Versions in
other languages tiave followed rapidly,
and the Bible is largely accessible
The vast pupuiation of China will con-
tinue to be more or less homogeneous,
and tbu name inlluences will t>o at
work wherever Chrlstiauity has ob-
tained a foothold. ••
— My life 1» not my own. bin riirl»i> who gave 11
ADd Uu Ocslows 11 upon all tbt> rucp. I josf It tor Qiysrll. and louv I save It I hold li cloi-e. bill only to exproU H.
Accept II, Lnnl. for ovliern throuitb (by grace "
— Woman's work for women grow
out of the natural rcsponte of wom-
an s tender heart to the cry of sutTcr-
ing. "Aro there any fcmuU men
among you to come and tcach imf" asked Chinese women of an American
missiooary twenty-nine years ago.
"Vou must »>end us single women,"
wrote the wives of mliHlonarlea.
David Abel camo homo on purpoao to
make Kngllah-apeaklng women under-
stand In what nondago and dogpalr
tholr oriental Bluu-rd were.
—God has apiiroved of tho work uf
the women. Wild, unruly Ix-inga who
met the drat misslonariCH In i'orsia
aro tranaformcd lntf> dignlOtd ladlua,
conducting woman's moetlnga and con-
tributing columnH to miaBlon Journals.
In any village of Aala Minor or of
China, the tidiest bouno with tho
ulcaneat tablecloth and moHt Inviting
b<!d la tho homo of a mUaion-BOhooi
graduate. The tranafortuation la ap-
parent in tho hour of death, as in tbo
caao of tbo old.SlamoHO woman, whia-
poring, "My Savior ," with her laat
breath; and tbe young wife In Africa,
resisting tho witoh-doctor and oharif-
ing her huabaud to IJO "faithful to
God. " Those wotnon aro transformed
by iiapplnoss. Christianity encourages
tbom, makuA their Intolleot, Iciudlos
aaplration, as well as offers poaoe.
—Pieaso return ttie quarterly blanks
to MIHS Claiborne promptly. Wo wish
to send a 'good report to Daltlmoro
tho last quarter ul tho Conventional
year, )'8ooieties lose Interest Just In
proportlou as thuy fall to glvo to out-
side Interests. Tho needs at home
aro HO presslDfc ibat they yield to iho
temptation to give all they raise to
home interests, and then tliey do not
UIM ID wnd in « report nexl quartar.'*
Dear siatore of local aocltlea, romeni-
dor those In greater nood aud give a
part, at Inaat, of your earnings to
mlsaiona ^ 1'.. S. H
The Sunday-school Teacher as a
Soul Winner .
t
IIV HKV s M (ilM'loN
The real and primary object of all
Sabbath-school uiachlng is to no>" tlie
aeod of God's everlasting truth and
work with a view to the harvesting of
every soul thai eoinea into the Suii-
day-school. This being true, no one
can airi»rd to enter this work without
due rellectlon and con8lderivtlt)n
1. As to tholr ability
i. As to their willingness to i;on»e-
crate themselves to tho work
As to their readimiss to «a< rlllce
whatever time and lueaiiM l» deiiiaiuled
of them toijuallfy theui for their work.
4. A determination iindt-r Clirlsl U)
become a soul winner for hlin
I desire H» submit a few liiouglilH
which 1 trust will b») of some iKJiiellio.
aid to our Sunday-school teachem in
winning aouls^to Christ
livery Wacher should recognize the
importance of greeting their pupils In
tho class on Sunday morning M<H.a
tbom with a smile and " a glad to siu
you," with a warm grasp of the hand,
assuring them that it Is a great pleas-
ure to you to see them. Many a lieart
is won and Impressions are made fi>r
time and otornlly in this way Not
only must this lie done in tiie class,
but up<in tho street, tho inibiic road,
anywhere, everywheic. How many
hearts aro chilled and tiirned away
by the cold IndltTerenco of their Sun
day-school lenchcrs!
What every Sunday-school icaolior
needs is a good olu fashloned casi' of
•shake hands" religion- a religion
that can be seen In tho i xprcssion of
the eye, tho grasp of the liand, ttie
lone of the voice; a religion that eon
truls the whole life.
Again, in my opinion every teacher
would be more succuitsful If they could
make themselves more or less familiar
with tho«nvlronments <»f cacli schoUr,
1th their homi- life, whrtlier »)r not
they have any religious icitluenwM
thrown around them In their home;
what la their social life, tho characu;r
of their associations—all this will aid
the teacher to adapt his teaching to ef-
fect his purposes. A wise general will
make himself thoroughly acquainted
with the position and movements uf
tho army that U cunfrtinting hlin, so
that he may bo bettor enabled to dls-
poao of hlB own troops to maku a auc-
coaaful attack. Bo 1 boliovo if tho
Sunday-Bchooi teacher would buoomo
acquainted with tho onvlronments of
each pupil tboy would bu bettor pro-
pared to bring forth argumonta aud
InfluonceB that would prove moro ef-
fectual in capturing tho huart and
loading it to Christ.
Too many of our toachcra know noth-
ing about their pupils only what they
aoo of tbom on Hundity niurnlng. Ijiko
the preacher, l ie must Know his peo-
l^lo, Btudy them at thulr humcH, l>uforo
ho can auocosafully meet tho wants in
each Individual case.
But again. In order to bo a suc-
cessful soul winner tho toaohnr should
bo a close student of human naturo.
They must study tbe naturo aud dlapo-
sliion of every scholar. Like tbo far-
mer, in order to bu a suuceasful farmer
ho studies tho naturo of the soil in
every fleld whioh he Is to cultivate
He must know the naturo of the soli
and sow such seed in each particular
deid as will yield him tho surest and
ffreatest harvest. Bo with the 8un>
day-school teacher. But, one may
say, we have but one kind of toad to
•oir—the ffosptil of our. Lord Jesus
Ohrlst 7rue, but thp ffOsitel l i « piu-
Tibtu vnum—ona grand truth ,as a
whol«, bnk oompond of many tnitha;
• - ^ -ktt
and while ono truth would bo a wun
dorful drawing power ui>ou ono heart,
the samo truth would prove Inoffoctual
in another caao. 8o wo must study
thu soil and tlioii bo wise in aolcetlng
such Bible truth as will most cortalnly
or surely germinate and bring forth
fruit to tJod's glory.
The oxampio of our bieaaed i^ord
should bo studied and followed. lie
always adapted his toaching to his
hearers. To the cultivated Nlcode-
mus ho at oniw introduced the groat
doeti Ino of tho now birth. While his
mind was unable to grasp thla great
truth, yot the Savior know tho soil,
and ho suwed the soed that certainly
yleiii-d the harvest. To tho woman
of Samaria Ho speaks of the well of
water, and thus from the natural,
which she could comprehend. He led
her mind up to tho higher and spirit
ual. He knew tho soil, sowed accurd-
ingiy, and the harvest was rea|ied
So In every case He adapted Ills
ujaelilng to Ills hearers, and every
Sunday-school toacbor, so|far as they
aro able, should do tho same. Like
tlie wise teacher In tho literary school,
having but one object in view—the d«>-
velopment and tho highest education
possible In every Individual caso-he
has no castlron mould Into which U>
cast every student, but by a close
study of each ono he seeks by such
methods as are best adapted to ac
comiilish their ono great purpose
.lu.si HO should every Sunday-school
teacher, so far as posalblo, by a close
study of each member of lh« class, so
teach as to bring about tbo greater nv
suit, the winning of each soul to
Christ
But not only inust tboy study the na-
ture and adapt their toachlng to each
pupil, but this will all probably fall
unless the life of tho Sunday-school
Uiacher Is an exempllflcatlun of the
truths taught Tho bieaaed Lord meant
a great deal when bo aald. " I>n your
light so shine before men that tboy
may soe your good works and glorify
ytiur Father In heaven." Tho life,
the daily walk, tho business life, all
should correspond with the life of
Him whom they preaont to tho class
on Sunday morning. If they loach
that It IH wrung to ain, thoy must ab
stain frum It, if they tcach that It Is
right lu dony ungodliness, they must
practUw It; If thoy teach that Christ
domanda tbo whole hoart, thoy must,
so far as they can, yield up tholr
whulo hearts to Htm. Heroin lies tho
groat power of every Sunday-achool
teacher for winning SOUIB. This is
tholr drawing power, a power that Is
almost irresistible. No argument can
bo brought against it. U t a poraun
bo over so GfHoiont as a teachnr, able
to portray vividly tho truths of the
lesson and enforce it with unanswer-
able arguments, yot If the life Is an
open contradiction and positively at
variance with his teaching ho will not
A b t o l u t e l K Pur0.
B A P T I H T A N D R E F L I 3 C T ( ) H , M A I t C J I 2 5 . j l » 9 7 .
• istsbMtod lor Its ireat lesyanlna strengtli lid baiduifulness. Afsuns ili«J"®* n uiid
uluni
The Hit of the Season.ri IH iii i ide by Ayer'H SiirKa-piirillu. .lust at I his HciiMtii WIK'II hpiliig and ItH ii<'liiii-t a t l i i g dayn aro ulil i (IB, tlinro is iiolh-ingilkoAypr'H BiirHHpiirlllu t o p u t new life Into lh< sliigKi'^li
toiii. ItSWCCpB awaytlifMluIl-ness, lack of a|>petltc>, liin-giiidiiess, and p a i n , as u brooui Bweeps a w a y cob-webs. ItdoeB not brare tip. I t builds up. Its benefit Is loBting. D o you feel run down ? Take
AYER'8
Sarsapariila acnd for "CurelKviW." i'» paKCS.
Ktcc J (. Ayrr Co., Lowell. Mu»».
lM;como tho soul winner he otherwise
would.
But In orflor to reiiroilucn the life of
Chrlat they must po8«C8B his Spirit.
They must absorb Iwforo thoy can Im-
tiart. and their power t<i imparl can
never oxcecd that they reei-lve. What
I moan by this Is. nut only must thoy
iiti rcgoneralcd, but must eat dally of
Uic hidden manna of (i.jd's love or
crace or they cannot manifest 11 In
Mielr lives. Just as tho pliysical man
iiianlfeHs the fact that food is taken
Into tho system by the color in the
•heek and strength of muscle, so the
xplrltual man will manifest llsolf when
we receive spiritual food in our spirit-
ml life by producing all tho graces of
ilio Spirit if our souls aro half
starved thoy will api>car so to the
world, and the Sunday-school schol-
ars are very quick lu disccrn It. This
l eing true, wo may safely say that tbo
"oul winning power of a Sunday-
school toacbor Is commensurate with
Ills spirituality. The icachor that
Uvea every day under tho direct rays
of tho Hun of ItigbtoousnesB will as
rcrtainly partake of tbo proportloB of
Uiat Great Light as tho natural plant
will absorb tbo different proportlos of
ilio light that omanaioB from tho sun
Unit shines In youdor heaven; and as
ilio natural plant is made lioautlful.
Its attractlvo power onbancod and men
and women aro drawn to and admlro
H, «o will that Sunday-Bohool teacher
who absorbs dally the life and light
of his dear I ^ rd bocoine Iwautlful
In his life and his power will bo en-
linnced to attract and win souls to
Christ.
But ono will say, I desire to live
such a life, but I fall at BO many
places. HOW can I attain unto It? I
answer, only by prayer and faith In
Ood. Ho has said, "My gi-ace Is suf-
Uciont for thee.'* To be a succossful
aoul winner ovory one must follow the
oxampio and instructlnn of the blessed
LiO,rd. He spent much of his time In
prayer while others were sleeping,
iioldlng sweet communion With his Fa-
ther, thus gathering strength for his
next day's work. One whole night
upon the mountain side and rising up
early ho sought bis Father's face. So
I would say, Sunday-achool toacbor,
go and do likewise. Moisten your pil-
low wlih your tears aud ask God to bo
with you In your dally life; and when
oil Sunday tho hour comes to go be-
fore yuur class, gu Urst from your
closet, with your soul melted down
with God's love and your heart bur-
dened fur tho salvation of your class.
Spiritual puwur comes from within;
It Is the life of Jesus In tbe soul
• working in you to will and to do of
his own good pleasure " Karnest
prayer brings the Divine agent InUi
contact with us and Ho quickens, en-
ergl/.os, and gives power to tho teach-
ing, and through the Irulh reaches the
hearts and souls arc won
Jesus says (Mat x. "Fur it is
not ye that speak, but the Spirit of
your Father which sijeaketh In you."
.Much of the power uf the Sunday-
itchuol teacher flows from a spring hld-
di;n In the socrel communion with Gud.
Ttils is the fountain frum which flows
the grcatesl Influence over the souls of
the pupils and wins tbom to Christ
I cannot place too much emphasis
on the necessity of depending on the
presence and power of the Holy Spirit
The Indwelling of Hlin. who aids,
guides and comfortB, has been the
fountain of power in all the past, 1«
now, and will be In the future. And
today each ono should say with i'aul,
"Our sulliclency is uf God. " The
power uf the Sunday-school teacher
does not consist In bis aptness to
tcach, but In his vital connection with
tho great Spirit of God. He must
pray In tho Spirit, speak in the Spirit
and live In tho Spirit. That wire yon-
der may be properly arranged: every-
thing adjusted excepting the coonoc-
tion with the battery, ami there would
bo no more power In that wire than
any utber, but lot the electric current
be turned on and there is power
So lot the Sunday-school t<;acbor be
over so well equipped bo thoroughly
etllclent In his leaching, but not In
connection with the great batUTy of
(Jod s love and grace through the
Holy Spirit, and his elTorts will Ijo
futile; but let tho connection bo made
and hearts will be thrilled and wun to
tbe Lord Jesus Christ. He says: "And
I, W 1 be lifted up, will draw all men
unU) me."
Oh I that every Sunday-schoolteachT
could make tho connection now, and
all bccomo soul winners. Tho rewards
will auroly como; you may not soo U
In this life, but tho brightest and high-
est reward la reserved in heaven for
you. "Tlioro you will shine as the
brlghtnoBs of tho firmament," "aud
as the BtarB forever and over." ICvery
soul you win to Christ horo will bo In
that bright world a source of eternal
joy. I'aul 8ayB(lTes8. 11. 10): ' For
what Is our hope, or joy, or crown of
reJolclngV Aro not oven ye In the
proacnco of our Lord Jesus Christ at
Ills comlngV" It has not ontorod Into
the hoart of man to conceive of tho
joy a that aro In regervallon for ovory
faithful Sunday-Bchool teacher who la
really a soul winner for Christ. So
under God's graco and In the strength
uf our adorable Savior let each do-
tannine to bccomo a soul winner from
thla time forth.
State Misi loni.
Mlaslons moro,' that prompts mo to wrlto
Being brought In oloso contaot with
tbo imupfo nf ihoso mission fields, my
soul Is drawn out to thom in the deep-
est sympathy as I hear their stories
of doBilluiion - humee with no Bible,
youths nearly grown that never aaw
Inside the BIblo In their lives, grown
people who have not heard a sermon
for the Inst eight or nine years, young
ladles who novor saw till lu tbe last
few years a white person Immersed,
and thought it was only practiced by
tho negroes Sad, but only too true.
And then thu fact, as alated by Dr.
Holt, that there are one million aoula
unsaved in Tennessee, makes a aad
picture for tho Baptists of Tonnesaoo
to look upon
I was lalklnL' to a gentleman lately
and he said the pooule would nut be-
iiuve some MtatemcntH he had made in
regard lo the flnaneial condition of
some nelghborhuods. and I thought
that might IHJ the reason why so little
Is being done for Slate .Missions. I
rf!m<"m'«;r well when I worked under
[>c Kidd of liusecllvlllo. Ky ., as no-
ble a brother as any one would care
to work under, when I would go to
him and call his attention to some
destliiiU! field ho would say, "The
trouble i» the churches don't believ^
there Is any destitution.''
.Much is said and wrlitt^n tbeae days
about iho condition of our Boards, of
their indebtedness, and ihelr great
anxiety to go lo tbe Southern Baptist
Convention free of debt. There is
only one practlt^al remedy that I can
see, and that is to Increase the givers.
Push Stale .Missions, and carry out
the motto of our worthy Secretary,
Dr. Holt—•'Tennessee for Christ"—
and turn that million of unsaved souls
Into Missionary Bapllats and givers
to the cau.fec of Christ and tbe prob-
lem Is solved so far as Tennessee Is
concerned We are wild that "For-
eign Missions react on the cburchcs In
the home land.' We reply. Give us
Tennesree for Christ and then wo will
exert a dlruci influence on the foreign
Held C A. BAUNES.
Palmyra, Tonn
David Lipscomb on Acts 11 88.
Having devoted a largo part of my
ministerial life to the mission work In
Ilotbel aud Cumberland Assoalationa,
I hope that I will be permitted Ui say
a word to our ohurchos all over the
'state. The time has come when a re-
newed Interest ought to bo stirred up
In relation to State MIsBlOns. Thoy
have been overshadowed by other In-
teresti, and the fields already white to
the harvest are too miioh neglected.
It is not that I love Foralgn and Home
MlssiOM lei*i but that I love State
nii'ssitge which brings more gladness to a true iroitian's bean than tbe sweet •skiiiance that u little one is coul in* to bless ber life and call taeil " Mother." '
lUit in all het loving pre|>«ni. tioim for the expected litirc guest,
. . a niotlier is liable to forget that L \ lier own health and physical w \ condition is the most iinp<'it>
^ ii;it piovUion which can possi. bly be made for tlie baVy'H happlnesH.
If the prospcotiv* taotlicr is weak, uiiv ouo and atixiouii, this conditiun is l»ound to
•T'/react on the Imby'a constitution .N<'dain-tiness of wardroU' will coinpi-naatf for the UiSii
ofthr natural, lirallhy vigor which a niothci Rbotild be stow upon hrr baby.
.\s early n» pr.fsible diu iiiK rc-tatior. the expi-ctaiit
. nwtlnri slmiili! rtrinfoicf hi-f b.iri''v powers with tUe sustaining, lualtb • .tui< inflin nce of Dr Pierce's Favoijie rescription It gives natorsl. healthy vigor and cla«tic
endurai ce to tlir organs >j-,i <'lally cottf<-rm-d in moiherhoot!. It mil.rs tlic cominff oi bahy pcrffctly safe and almo?i naiolcRS. It irivi •< nefve-strvngtl) to the inother and vital iirdlho<»d to the child It IS the onlymcdicinc devised by an edu-
cated physician specially to ovtrcome all weaknesses and disrases of the feminine orRins
Mr4 R'jKoe Vanover. of Robinson Cirtk Pikt o, K\ . wnti-s • I to mvii-ss my lhanki
I > you' tor lh» 7'tyl I Imvt r«tivf<l trdiii y. m Pivorlte Pr«— r T.njo ' I hnvc u.<-<l il al <.nlrr •nl tinjfs for 111. Un l.vf yesri,. and aiw r.y. wnb lir m j f l STall villi; result!. Bu! Hif Rrfnit-* '0f>.l rn.eivcil f^r.i the •Pavotiti' I'rrvnirtion' »4« a'wit four 'iiotitns «|fi. wlicii inv luM b»t>> wa* (>oro 1 »»» affiirtcd with tin; ' txd frver In«lrfl4 of k'li . MC Bn»t»rtor»<.f I ii..c<! the I-f K-ription ' anil v.,. , iirr«l A ladv fru-twl of mim HIS "imtlarlj .liiclf't and af v iht dr»toi and l(»i* hit i"iir>lie« amJ dt'd I «in j; vear old wriifh 147 the mother of fivf chiidrer and am en'oyid* Hie t>Mt of hek h
Dr Pierce's Pleasant Pellet* cv.rt const . pat!r"i nronr. Iv and perniancnlly.
Km. Folk-. -In your editorial of
March 4th on Acts II ."W you adopt^as
it!> ffue meaning this rendering: "Re-
l«nt and IH; baptised evory ono uf you,
trusting on the name of Jesus Christ
for the remission of sins."
Did you know that Dr. D. Lipscomb,
senior edluir of tho Gogpel Advocate, has recently been converted to the same
position, and that by a Methodist
preacherMere Is what ho says on the
sentence, "in tho name of Jesus Christ
for tho remission of sins." (Acts 11.
;18):
" i n the name of JOSUB Christ does
not moan by the authority nor into the
namo of Jesus Christ. It is neither
Inlo the namo of Christ nor by tho
authority of Christ, but upon tho name
uf Christ, relying upon or trusting his
namo. Generally a wrong meaning Is
givon this language • It Is only a few
years slnco I learned Its true moaning^
I owo my Indobttidness to Mr. Dltzler
for tho Buggcstion."—D. Lipscomb In
Gmttl Ad^'octtU March 1, 1804.
Again: "But In Acts 11. 38 we have
a wholly dllTorent preposition: It Is
epi. ' This doos not moan Into, or In,
by the authority, of; but tpi means
upon, rest upon, rollance,upon. And
hero it IB, be baptlxed epi the name of
Jesus. My contonllon is, let ihe Holy
Spirit moan Just what it says., Itsayt
nmmuti hcr»—upon—and not into
or In. I yot loarn things from tho
commission and Peter's sermon, new
U) mo, frequently. I bad read that
sentence one hundred times In the
Greek. I have known the difTerenoe
in the meaning of tk, en and tpt tor
^^psH 1
fifty years, but I never noted tbe mean-
ing of this sentence until Mr. Ditzler
called it up. I foudd then Dr. Hack-
ett had so translated it. I learn many
things slowly, but continue to try to
learn "—D Lipscomb In Gosptl Adm-cate March 27, 1894
If you and Lipscomb are cornjct as
to the meaning of epi the following ren-
dering is about correct: "Repent and
be baptized, every one of you, trust-
ing on the name of Jesus for the remis-
sion of sins, and ye shall receive the
gift of the Holy Spirit ."
A question for the editor: Doos the
construction of the language of Acts
li. 38 prohibit the following rendering
of that passage: itepent and ovory one
of you, relying upon tho namo of Jesus
for the remission of sins, be baptized
and ye shall receive the gift of the
Holy Spirit? J T . O A K L E Y .
[Tho other rendering is more nat-
ural, according to the Greek. There
is no material difference, however, be-
tween these two constructions.—ED. ]
LTTEBABY N ^ E S .
—Thecompetition announced by The Century Company ought to shar|)on tho
wiu of a good many persons who find
the winter evenings bang heavily on
their hands. The ISO questions, for
the answers to which money prir.cs of
•l,000are ofTeretl, call for Information
on subjects with which most of us are
IcBs fitraillar than we imagine ourselves
to be. Tbe contest seems to bo ingen-
iously arranged, and if it Is followed
by other competitions of the same sort,
there will be a general rattling of dry
bones which He useless and forgotten
in the corners of one's mind. 'It
would be amusing to see a sot of ques-
tions prepared to test the general
knowledge of the new books and new
plays of the last five y<Htrs. Every-
body was reading Lombroao for a
time, and then came the vogue of
Nordau'i "Degeneration;" but it l i
more than proliable that many of us
who talked learnedly about "psyohla-
try" and "eenolalia" have already
forgotten the oatoh-words which for a
time ware spattered about tbe 'pagei of
the daily newipapen.
i I . - „ .hS. ....
B A P T I S T A N D R E F L E C T O t t , M A R C H JS6. 1 8 9 1 .
Baptist and Reflector.
Na»hvllle.Toiin.. March 26, I8»7
Klm^U K FOLK f.ulTOti W Y gUISKNHEKllV. AMOCIATB KlUTOB A H UAUAMISS. ri -Hl K.lll.- >••"• SAM W MKKK llrsiHESg MANAORH
• irKU'lt -Vom. rr** fnl' H"0»« TVlcphono No IM3
.OB'OKirrioi. PiB AimrM. i" AI.VAWCI Single copj ID club* of ten or loort To mtnlstern
l:: tt I 7 I W
HI.BANF. S10TI<;»:.
,. All nuMcrlbera »re presumed lo u* per 3.»oeDt until we receive notice lo the contr»r» If you wleh jour paper dUcontlnued, arop ua * ord to lti»t eSecv. »n(J It win be done II you •re behind In y"ur sutMicrlpilon the •mount oece»»»r» to p»T up ..mIi Jue- «t,rr you order the paper ilopped
The label on your pap«'' "ill tel. )ou • hen your dubscrlptlon eiplrei. Notice that, and when your llnse Is out ««nil on y. ur re newal without waltir.ir to hear rrom un
J. If you wl»h k change of poBtodlte 40 drees. »lway»gi»e the poetofnoe from wh'.ch ta well M the postomce lo which you wuh the ehanie made Always Rivc In full and plainly wrltieo e»erT n»me acd poeiofllce you write about
t . Ma»e all checiis. orilrrs -u pay
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A P L E A F o i l T H E SE.\TI^^E^-TAJ.
Sometime avTO a poetic woman
stood besiiie ber husband lookinj? at
Niajjara Falls. The lady wtt.s pic-
turinj? in her fnind the maj?nif5cence
of all r.<xl s works, and especially
the jflorious >.'ran(leur of Niagara
Her farmer husband waK staudinK
by her .side, and broke in upon her
fnusinj; with the followinK remark
"Wha t a splendid place this is to
wash sheep."
This reminds us Once upon a
time we were in St Aujfustine. F'la.,
the oldest city, it is claimed, In
America. We were walking with
two friends throujfh the oldest part
of the city. One was a preacher.
He is a very excellent preacher, but
is quite practical in his disposition.
The other friend was his dauKbter
We were walkinir along by old Fl.
Marion. This Fort is more than
300 years old. I t was begun in the
year 1565.
The day was remarkably beauti-
ful. The sun shone bright and
clear. There was no cloud in the
sky to mar its brightness. The air
was soft and balmy. IJeforo us
were the broad waters of the river,
pencefully sleeping. Behind us
were the old city gates, said to be
about 300 years old, and relics of
the time when thoy used to build
walls around olties in order to ser
cure protection from enemies. On
our right hand was the old sea wall,
built ot ooquina shells, to break the
force ot the waves as thoy dashed
shoreward, and to prevent, them
from overflowing the city. Every-
thing around UH was extremely ro-
mantio. We almost fnlt' that we
were l iv ing in the past, 300 years
ago. Wo oould not help thinliit/g
about the pant. We thought ot the
time when this old fort j u i t in front
of UB was full ot Boldtera, and on the
rlvar yonder were men-i^-war bom-
barding the fort. We could olmost
hear the boom of the cannon and the
rattle of the musketry, together
with thttshrleksof the wounded and
dying. Wo could hardly restrain
the exuberance of our spirits as wo
walked through the grounds In the
rear of the fort. But what was our
friend thinking about? Mo wolkod
along with his eyes upon tbo ground,
and he broke into our reverie, call-
ing us suddenly back from the past
to the present, us ho remarked very
gravely "This is a fine place for a
cow pa.stiire." He has a good deal
of sense in his head and grace In
his heart, but we are afraid that he
has not much poetry In his soul.
Aijd yet are not those two illus-
trations but expressions of the spirit
of theage? Cm' /«<«<», is still the cry.
What is the use'' people ask about
everything whii-h comcs up. How
much money la there in it? This
practical spirit is carried to such an
extent that oftentime.'< people will
<aUulate in cold dollars and cents
whether an education will pay their
boy or not. If he does not go to col-
lege he can make so much money.
If he does go, he will have to spend
so much, but he will be able to
make so much more than he would
have made had he not gone. They
then strike a balance and st>e on
which side the preponderance lies.
If he can make more money in the
end by going to college, they think
he had better go. If not, he had
better stay at home and go to work.
As if the whole business of life was
to make money! That and only
thatl Moasurinu an education by
dollars and cents! Is there noth-
ing higher in the world than money?
What about the pleasure the educa
tlon brings—the expansion of
thoutfhts. the broadening of one's
existence, the lifting up of his life
to a higher plane, the privilege of
coming in contact with the best
minds of all the ages and of think-
ing their thoughts? Are all these
worth nothing, even if the boy may
not be able to coin them into dollars
and cents?
We shall not charge that there
are any so base and so mean as to
try to make merchandize out of the
religion which they profess—Chris-
tians for revenue only, if we may
use the contradictory expression.
We could hardly believe thatunyoiie
would stoop to such selfish things
in the sacred name of the re-
ligion of Jesus Christ. Bu t aro
there not many of us who do seem to
look at religion only from the stand-
polntofour own individual interests,
eternal, certainly, if not temporal?
What good will it do him? wo ask,
not'what good will it enable him to
do others?
Wo believe in tho practical, yes.
The practical is Important. I t is
necossary. Bu t yre beliove, also, in
the sentimental. I t Is not neces-
sary that wo should display senti-
ment upon every occasion, or that
we should live constantly in tho
realm ot senti;nent. I t la better to
build houses on the ground than
castlea in tho air, as a regular thing,
but, we believe, there is a p lMe for
the sentimental, also Sentiment
has a refining and upl ift ing influ-
ence upon us. I t lifts us up above
the sordid valley of earth with all
tta mire and dirt , and its heavy at-
moaphere and muricy akies, up to
the mountain peaka, where the air
is pure and the breexes blow cool,
and where we can lift up our eyes
straight to heaven with no cloud to
shut off our vision. Ah. yes, lei us
be proctlcal. Wo must be practlcol.
Tho very exigencies of our exist-
ence demand It. But at the sumo
time let us, as often OH opportunity
alTords, escape from this dull rou-
tine of practical duties, ond spend
awhile on tho enohanted ground of
the sentimental.
S O l ' T l l E l t N I t A I ' T I S T C O y V K N TION
As already announced in our
columns, the Southern Buptlbt ('on
vention will meet In Wilmington, N.
C., on Muv "th. Thp&vthern Bap
tist Young People's Union will meet
in the same city on the day previous
It is e*iM>cted that there will be a
largo attendance at both of these
meetings, particularly at the Con-
vention We hope that Tennessee
will befully represented. Wilming
ton is a beautiful city by the sea,
and those who attend the Conven-
tion will have the opportunity, no
doubt, of seeing olJl ocean in all his
majesty, which of itself will be
worth a tr ip to Wilmington, to say
nothing of the great pleasure and
benefit to be received from attend-
ing the Convention Itself.
There are several routes to Wil
mlngton from here. One Is by way
of Atlantaover the Nashville & Chat-
tanooga road, ond from Atlanta,
either over the Southern Itoilrood
or other lines. Another is by woy
of Chottanoogaond Ashevllle. These
are oil excellent routes, ond there
will be a number to go each route.
We have selected the last named
route.
Special schedules hove been ar-
ranged to accommodate delegated
and visitors dur ing the Convention
week so that passengers can leave
Nashville at 11:20 p. m. on May 4lh
or fith, reach Knoxville for break-
fast at H a. m. next morning, Ashe-
ville for dinner, arr iv ing at Greens-
boro about 10:30 p m and at Wil-
mington at 7 o. m. on May 6th or 7th.
Returning, special schedules have
been arranged so wo can leave
Wilmington on May lOlh or 11th at
10:30 p. m., arrive at Greensboro at
5:45 a m., Ashoville at 2:05 p. m.,
Knoxville at 7:40 p m , and Nash-
ville at 6:45 a. m., May 12th. This
schedule will enable all West Ten-
nessoons to leave home by daylight
and make connection with through
trains leaving Nashville at 11:20 p.
m., and arrive at Wilmington tho
second morning following in time
for breakfast. I t also will enable
East Tennesseans to join us at
Knoxville or Morristownand in that
way we can all go together on the
same train to Wilmington. Thisroute
will also give us a daylight ride to-
gether through the beautiful scenery
of East Tennessee and Western
North Carolina, along the French
Broad Blver, over the Blue Ridge
Mountains, and through the Land of
the Sky, as tbo country around Ashe-
vllle has been appropriately named,
and It is said to be the flnest scenery
east of the Rooky Mountains. Of
course everyone has the privilege of
going any way he ohooaes or of not
going at al l If he prefers, but we
hope that a large number wil l go
from Tenneasee, and that all thme
who oan do oo w i l l go with ua over
this route. The rates from points
in TenncBSoe to Wi lmington and re-
turn will be one fare for the round
trip. Tickets will be sold May 3rd
to 7th inclusivo, good to return in
15 days from datn of sale. I f a suf
licient number indicate their pur
poso to go from Tennessee, a special
Baptist train will leave Nashville
at 11 20 p. m., May 4th, arr iv ing at
Wilmington at 7 a. m.. May 6th. Re
turn ing, this train will leave Wil-
mington at 10:30 p. m., May l l t h ,
reaching Ashoville at 2:05 p. m ,
May 12tb, where a stop will be
made for tho purpose of visiting the
various points of Interest around
Ashevllle, including tho Vander
bilt mansion and estate. Iioaving
Ashoville at 12:05 a. m.. May 13th,
this train will reach Chattanooga at
8 ^ m., whore a stop will be made
to visit Ix)okout Mountain, Chicka
mauga National Military Park and
other points of Interest.
The sleeping car fore from Nash
viile to Wilmington will be t5 for a
berth, or #2.50 ooch, if two take a
berth together. Those desiring
berths should address the editor of
this pa))er so that necessary ar
rongcments con bo made for thom.
In this connection wo may call at-
tention to the offers which we are
making on another page to give
round trip tickets to the Conven-
tion for o certain number of new
subscribers to tho paper. Read
this over and see it you cannot se-
cure tho requisite number of sub-
scribers in order to have the privi
lege of taking this delightful trip.
T U A I M X n C H I L D HEN
Tho HiUiail liecortler remarks:
"Tho most remarkoble th ing about
the recent 'Congress of Mothers'
in Washington was that most ot the
delegates were not n u r r l o d . " Bro.
Bolloy evidently forgets the well
known fact that old bachelors and
old maids always know better how
to troln chlldron than those who
have chlldron of their own. The
reason for It is because they go
upon theory. Thoy know how It
ought to be done, but they do not
take into account the very practical
consideration with which they have
not had experience, and yet which
is a very important element in the
solution of tho firoblem, and that it
is the will of the child. No one who
has not had actual experience in the
tra in ing of children can realize the
strength of this factor In the prob-
lem. There Is a law ot mathematics
which is called the resultant ot
forces. If only one force strikes a
body tho body wil l be carried to a
point measured by the amount and
the direction of the force which
strikes It, as well as by Its own re-
sistance, and It wil l be found in a
straight line from the force which
came against It. If, however, two
forces strike a body from different
dlreotlona, then t he ' body will be
foiind at a point measured by the
respeotive direction and atrength
of the two forces as well as by its
resistance. To make the applica-
tion: Old bachelors and old maids
oonslder only their own will in the
tra in ing of children, bu t parents
know that the wi l l of the tihild must
be taken Into consideration, and now
what that ohlld shall become will
depend upon the oharaoter and
strength of the will , both of the
p a r m t and of the ohlld.
B A P T I S T A N D H E F L E C T O l l , M A R C H 2 5 l t » 9 7 .
I N T H E O B J E C T I V E CASE.
The objective caae la quite a use-
ful Institution. We oould not well
get along without it. Whi le the
nominative oiso serves its purpose,
it needs the support of theobjoctivo
case, or else it will become quite
weak and vapid. I t would not do
for us to have nothing but tho nomi-
native case. But at the same time
we do not want the objective cose all
the time. I t would be even worse
t«i have the objective case olwoys
than to have tho nominative case ol
ways. There ore some people who
lire forever in tho objective cose,
and who never seem to get out of it.
They ore always In the negotlve,
never In the positive. Thev ore do
structlvo, not constructive—tearing
down, never bui lding up. They
are pessimists ot the worst type,
looking on the dark side of things
rhey can always see tbo cloud, but
they never see the sliver l ining In
it. They ore regulor dogs In the
manger, unable to eat the hay them-
selves, ond unwil l ing to let anyone
else do so. Such people are not
happy. They are sour, morose.
Happiness is not negative, but posi-
tive. I t is not destructive, but con
structive; not pessimistic, but opti-
mistic. I t comes from doing some-
thing forothers, try ing to help thom,
to build them up, to moke them bet-
ter and happier. I t Is only as wo
live for others thot we really live
ourselves. It we have ever been
disposed to be In the objective case,
let us get out of It. Let us get Into
tho nominative case. A t least let
this be our normal condition. Let
us be positive, constructive, and
thus we will be happy.
PERSONAL AND PRACTICAL
— We were sorry lo oiUs the visit ot
Dr E. N DIcken of FrftDkllo, Ky., to
our onico laetwoek. Dr. Dioken in one
of tbo 8troDgo8t proauhera In Kuntucky.
which Ih sayinir a ^roat deal.
—Mr. D, L. Moody hae agreed to
conduct a 8«ric8 of iuuetini;« In Louis-
ville, Ky., from lb« 24th to tho 28th of
tnls month. The met tlnKa will be held
ID tbo Auditorium and Warren's Me-
morial Church.
- Ilov. T. T. Th</iD|<BOU of I'ulaskl,
Tcnn.. I» now in New Orleans aBslnt-
Injr Dr I). I I'lirHer in u mnctin(( at
the Valence-street Church We hope
lo hoar of pood ronults from the meet-
Injf. Hro. Tnomimon In a line gOBitel
preacher
—Thin weather to qulie dprlnji-llke,
with i u warm BUOHhlno and its fre-
quent showers. In Florida, however,
it was like summer time Ladles were
Kolntr around with white dreuses on
and the men wore alpaca coats and
straw hats, and thq |>eoplc carried
umbrellas lo protcol lliein from the
sun 11 wa* pleasanl, but the trouble
about ll Is the summers arc too long
—It wai< quite a pleasure to tee Uov.
<;. H. Crutcher of Shelbyville In our
ottlce last week. He was In the city
having his eyes trcaa-d by our cele-
brated Baptist oculist. Dr. G C.
Savage. Bro. Crutcher graduated
with honors lam year at the Southwest-
ern Baptist ('Diversity. He Is doing
a fine work at Shelbyvllle, where he
is qultfl popular, as he was also in
West Tennessee.
CHURCH CONTRIBUTIONS Since tbo days of the old Scotch-
man In tho poem, who tried U) brow-beat the .exton Into trading the sov-erelffn he dropped In the basket for "tbo penny he meant to gle," there have been many involuntary dona-tloni to churobes, though seldom of largo proportions A London judge has recently decided that where a worshiper by mlsUko puts a larger amount than Intended Into the ohuroh collection-box tho money o a n ^ l be refunded on a plea ot error, ^ e de-cision grew out of a suit brought by a woman who attends service in a fash-ionable Episcopal ohuroh against the vicar and ohuroh wardens, her conten-tion being that, during a fit of men
•ati( • ' — - -tlUD UOlUK HUWI --• •-B —
tal aberration, the had placed In the pUte aaoverelgn instead of a shilling. She therefore sought to recover some •4.76. The court held that the mo-ment themoney fell Into the plate It bo-came an aooepted ofTerIng to t hop j rd , and that neither tho church officials nor tho courts are at liberty to author-ize the return to tbo donor.—Sfand-ard.
We doubt the correctness of the
London judge's decision. I t seems
to us that if a person puts too much
in the contribution basket by mis-
take he should be entitled to have
the mistake corrected. Besides, we
doubt whether the Lord would bloss
the money given In that way. "The
Lord loveth a cheerful g iver . "
Bu t we confess that It soems to us
an evidence of infinitesimal small-
ness for a person to br ing suit
against the offlolals of a church on
such grounds. As a matter of fact,
however, the offlolals ought to have
given the money back. Anyhow, the
decision wi l l tend to make every-
body more careful to examine the
money which they pu t li\. If It
shall ha re the efteot of making aome
persons give sti l l smaller amounts
than they do, we shall be very sor-
ry for it .
—On our return from tho meeting of
the Southern Baptist Press Associa-
tion in Tampa wo stopped over In
Atlanta for a few hours. Of course
we called at the office of the Chrigtian Index. Brother Van Neiis was not In,
but we bad a pleasanl chat wlih Dr.
Bell. Ho seems to Uko editorial work
very much. He and Brother Van Ness
have very greatly improved the Index during the year they have had ll In
charge.
—Rev Krnest GaloTownjeiid, pastor
of tho Central Baptist Church, Dallas,
Texas, was married on March l«th
In the First BapiUt Church to Miss
Hollle Harper of Dallas, who has for
some time been editor of the Woman's
Department of the Ttxa» UnptiM Standard, In which position she has
shown much ability. Tho two will
hereafter have charge of tbo chapel
car "Good W i l l " in Texas. Wo ex
tend worm congratulations.
—A strong eommtlleo of the Bar
Association of New York, after a caro-
(ul examination of tho Greater New
York charter, have expressed ll oo
their dollbarate opinion that Us enact
mont in Us present form would cause
serious misnhlet. Dcsplto this opinion,
howevor, tho Loglslailvo Commltteo
has decided to rejiort tho charter with
out any Important changes, and the
Independent says tho prosiwcl is that
U will bo speedily passed.
—The editor of tbo iS'frtMffnn? of
Chicago says ho received a letter ro-
oontly reading somewhat as follows:
"Rov.^ Peter Expounder has boon pas
tor of our ohuroh for tbroo months,
and during that ilmo It has been paint-
ed and roihlnglod." The editor sug
gests that U would bo " a good idea It
we should use the word •oburcb' with
ft little more oare." As a matter of
tact, we use the word "ohuroh" very
oarolessly. Wo UM U, for instanoe,
to refer to the organliatlon which
worships In tho house, to the bouse
In which It worshlpB itnd oftentimes to
the worship.Itielf. The proper slgnifl
cation ot the term Is with reference to
k local assembly or organised body
of beltevsri who have been called out
from the world.
- W o monUonod last weok the fact
that Dr. B. H. Carroll, of Waco,
Texas, had been compelled to decllno
delivering tho Gay Lectures at tbo
Southern Baptist Theological Semi-
nary this year on account of his ill
health. It is said that his friends are
seriously concerned about him and
plans sre liolDg made to allow .him a
long and much needed rest. We hope
they will bo carried Into effect. Wo
suggest that'he be sent to p:urop« for
a year's vscailon, with all of his ex-
penses paid He has ccrtainly earqed
such a rest
—We are glad to state tbU Dr. J.
B. Hawthorne, pastor ot tbo First
Baptist Church ot this city, returned
til the city last week from bis vacation
in Florida, and be says that blsjiealtb
Is as good as ll over was. A largo
congregation greeted him last Sunday
at tho First Baptist Church on his first
appearance In the pulpit after bis three
months vacation We shall resume
the publication of his sermons next
week. Rev. Frank WllUs Barnett.
who has been supplying Dr. Haw-
thorne's pulpit so acceptably daring
his absence, will remain to assist Dr.
Hawthorne In pastoral work and will
preach at night for a while until tbe
diiclor feels fully assured of his health
and strength.
—The-Roman Catholic archbishop
of Manitoba declares that voting upon
tbe school question otherwise than In
accordance with bis views is a " s in , "
and that ll Is a sin for wblcb penitents
are to resort exclusively to himself tor
confession, and for which Impenltents
who die In it are to be refused burial
In consecrated ground This Is only
in accordance with the principles ot
Catholicism in all countries wherever
they bavehad the opportunity U)express
themselves. It is just such claims as
these which led to tbe Inquisition. An
archbishop In this country would not
dare make such a claim now, but let
Catholicism get a little stronger hold
upon tho country and he would not
hesitate to do so.
-Hon . Neal Dow, who Is known as
tho Father of Prohibition. wa« 92
years old on March 20th. His birth-
day was observed as a prohibition
rally day throughout the civilized
world by order of tbe Woman's Chris-
tian Temperance Union. Mr. Dow
has been a pronounced champion of
temperance since 1837. In 1851 the
Maine Law. of which be was author,
was passed by tho Legislature of
Maine, and^lt has been upon the statute
books of that State over since, bring-
ing untold benefits to the citizens of
the State, both In saving them a large
amount of money which would other-
wise have been expended tor drlnic and
In criminal prosecutions, and also in
tho sobriety and peace and happiness
which it has brought to their homos.
' —A member ot tho State legislature
of Kansas has Introduced a bill to
placo tho Ten Commandments on tbo
statute book with proper ponaltles for
their violation. Tho bill was probably
occasioned by tho remark of a distin-
guished Kansas politician several
years ago that the Ton CommandmonU
and the Golden Rule have no place In
politics. As a matter of fact, tho Ten
Commandments aro the underlying
principles ot all law. We doubt, how-
ever, the wisdom of putting them upon
our sUtute books in their direct form,
because that would tend to bring sa-
cred things somewhat Into disrepute.
And ospooiaily we do not believe that
tbe flrstcommandmentshould be placed upon the statute books. Religious
freedom Is one ot the essential prinol*
pies of this country. .
—Dr. Robert Ryland ot Briitol, Va. ,
U now 82 years of age. Through the
BtUgknu Herald of la i t week he swidi
greetingi lo hU relatlOni and frleadi,
in which he sayi: " A t the oloie of my
92nd year, In goo^ health, but gradual-
ly declining in atrength, in a delight-
tul home and blessed with congenial
work, I am exceedingly happy. Every-
body is kind, and the gracious Lord
is full of longsufferlng and mercy to-
ward me. I am simply and earnestly
trusting In bis favor and awaiting his
will. God bless you a l l . " Dr. Ry-
land is a ramarkable spcolman of man-
hood, physical, menUl and spiritual.
In all three particulars bo stands high.
It is beautiful to see one grow old
gracefully as he has done. In fact,
be can hardly be called old at all, but
might more properly bo called 02
years young.
With reference to a recent remark
In tbe BAPTIST AND REFLECTOR, tbe
OospelAdcoaUeotImntweekanyt: " The
scarlet thread ut tho blood of Christ
runs all through tbe Bible from Gen-
esis to Revelation,' to be sure, but
that thread is always reached to the
saving of tbe soul by genuine faith
which obeys God. Faith that will not
be baptized when God's command in
tbe matter ot baptism Is clearly under-
stood talis to connect with the scarlet
thread of tbe blood of Christ." Inoth-
er words, the doctrine of the AdvoeaU Is through the tcater to the blood The
blood is efficacious when you get to It,
but the only way to get to Ills through
water. For our part we believe that
tbe true order is through the blood to
water. "The blood of Jesus Christ
His Sonclesnsetb us from all sin."
The blood cleanses actually and the
water only symbolizes the cleansing
which has already been effected by the
blood.
—Dr. Jno. L. Johnson, editor ot the
Bapfirt Layman, states In tbe last issue
ot tbe Lavman that he and bis wife,
together with Dr. W . A. Hurt, business
manager ot tbe paper, and wHo. started
to the meeting of tbe Southern Bap-
tist Press Association in Tampa and
got as far as Birmingham, Ala., and
found, on account of the change in
the schedule of tbe Southern Railway,
they would be a day late In reaching
Tampa and so concluded to go back
home. We are very sorry that they
did so. While they would bavemlssed
a good part of tho Association by be-
ing a day late, they would still have
bad tbe privllegeot enjoying probably
the best part ot It had they gone on.
There wore several who arrived at tLe
time Dr. Johnson would have come
who seemed to enjoy the Assooiation
very much and who did not seem to
regret their coming. We trust, how-
uTor, that at tho next meeting of the
Association there will be no mlsun-
dersunding and no vexatious delays
on the part of anyone.
—'•Water, water everywhere." This
could appropriately have boon said of
tbe country last week, and especially
of the regions adjacent to our rivers.
The Mississippi river i i about forty
miles wide at Memphis and shows no
signs ot falling. Farms, houses, and
In some cases whole towns, have been
Inundated. A number of lives have
been lost. The citizens ot Memphis
have been working very nobly and he-
roically to relieve suftorers In the sub-
merged district aroutod that city. The
Tennessee river has been so high as
to stop travel both over the Louisville
(C Nashville and tho Nashville, Chat-
tanooga & St. LouU Rai lroad! where
these roadi cross the river In Wei t
Tennessee. Here In NaihvlUe tho
Cumberland river has been very high,
though not at high a t It wenftomo
years ago. A t the raint have ceaeed,
however. It it hoped all these rivers
will begin to recede. It la a great
thing to ftel that you are tafe la a
good home when the floodt and ttormt
are raging around you. The tame
thing It true with the ttormt of IM*.
On what kind ot foundation i t your
hottte built? Are you on the RoeUr
10 B A P T I S T A N D R E F L E C T O K , M A R C H t J 5 , I 8 » 7 B A P T I S T A N D I I E F L E C T O H , M A R C H 2 6 , 1 8 » 7 . 11
i THE HOME
The Days That Are Dead
Thu days thai aru dead, thu days that are dt*ad,
When lovo abided with uu with tcinpt-Injr II pi of red I
The oyee we leariu-d to lovo ihoD, the vulues that we prized,
Thu dreamn our bo8om« ehurlohed, but never realised —
The joys that only now In our reet)l-leetlonH live
They'll over lliij;er with ut. llu- sweot est earth ean );lvo;
For lovlnu hearts were truer and a dearer priory shed
About the fairy valley>. of the days that are dead'
Will T Halt
The Man Who Spoiled the Music. There was no doubt about it, ho
did, and yet 11 was the lust thinjf he was liUely to heliovt; Ho loved musii.'. his voioe was often heard rlnjfln^r out a rollicninj; son>; in the tap room Atul now ii kept eominj,' to him. in at least a score of differ ent ways —he hiinst'lf was the man who spoiled all the music'
He was not in the britrhte.st pos-.sible condition for an arjjuinent, and certainly not in a humor to be convinced of a truth that he did not want to bo lie ve, and yet convinced he was. and .'ViTy minute addeil to the 'x)uviction. Kvery si^ht about him. and the silence, if not the sounds, forced it home upon him, so that there could not jv>ssibly be any mistake
It was SiiDiiav afterruwn about fouro ckK,« Hi' wa.-» ieannnjajfaiost
ithe wall by the diriy rtreplat-e, un-'washed and in his shirt s leeves. The rtxiin l Kiked as wretched as the man himself, and as d ir ty , blackened and broken, with window panes either plastered over with paper or stuffed out with rajfs. The r ickety furniture was there simply because it could fetch nothinj; e lsewhere . Seated on the other side of the fire-place was the white-faced and slat-ternly wife, holdinj,' a tiny bit of mortality at her breast, and breath-ing? a heavy s i f h that told of a bur-den there a ffreat deal heavier than the baby.
One word summed up the whole rea.son of the wretchedness -dr ink. Not a bad sort of a man but for th is one thln^; able to earn jfood w a g e s and to have a comfortable home; y e t no idle miscreant ever dwelt amid greater squalor or kept all about him In greater misery.
80 it was that on this Sunday aft-crDOon Jack stood as c r o s s as c r o s s could bo, ready to let out his luiscry upon the f irst victim he could find, as if anyone were to bo blamed for It sooner than himself. Then it was the do<ir opened suddenly with a bang, and in burst two little maid-ens s i n g i n g merri ly ; o y e s a n d faces, hands and feet, all wore full of music T h e y had come from t h e Mission Sunday-school, and the last hymn was in their ears and came cheeri ly r ing ing from thoir l ips:
" L"!? '"'A'.'"'.""" <""• Pttther In HmvaD Talli o( hl» luva In tho l)ook He bM glvfen."
T h e y had just got to tho l ine of tho ohorus, " I am so g l a d , " and It came in a t the opened door wi th such a bounding g ladness as t h e y lifted the latoh and felt that they wore In tho freedom of tho h o m e — " I am so g l a d " — t h e n suddenly they oame far enough to see their father. Instant ly t h e voloes w e r e Bllenoed,
tho sunshine died out of their e y e s ; with u frightened look lllling their faces they shrank outside tho door again and shut it noiselessly.
Tho si lence that followed was un-broken by a sound. The wife sat mournfully looking at the blackened ashes of the lireplace, with thu lit-tle one asleep in her arms. T h a t abrupt .and sudden silence smote J a c k ' s heart; those changed faces and the little frightened maidens bushed like that—he felt that he had done it all. Ho seemed to hoar af,'afu tiie happy burst , " I am so ^rlad,"and then that dreadful stop-ping. l ie was go ing to ask with an oath why they d idn ' t go on sing-ing, but thoy weren ' t there, and so it was no use to do that; besides, he knew well enough, too well, why they had stopp<>d, so it came about that he lifted himself from the wall and thrust himself fiercely into his jacket, ai>d went slouching t o w a r d s the door. Ho s trode out of tho court and away on, a n y w h e r e , until be got outside the streets and iuto the more quiet and pleasant roads, then he slackened his pace. T h e lierceness had turned to grief , and at last there came the words mut-tered to himself, 'That ' s what I am a l w a y s doing, 1 spoil all the music. "
It was dreadful to think of it, a s he turned it over. How much it meant I He thought of his wife, and of the sweet voice she had long ago, and bow, back in the old times, they bad s u n g togctLer. And LOW to think of her s i t t ing there, so white-faced and silent! She never even sang the baby off to sleep— only kept on s i g h i n g " A n y h o w , not when I am t h e r e , " said Jack " I s()oii all the music ."
If was dreadful to think about it, of the places he had been in as a carpenter and the chances ho had had. and how one after another he had lost them all through the d r i n k , and now the first to get notice to quit, the last to be offered a job, was he who bad prided himself on his work. " O h , dear, I ' v e been spoil-ing ail the music for y e a r s , " s ighed Jack.
So it came about that |)oor J a c k , so burdened and helpless, stopped there and then, and put bis face Into his hands and said, "God help m e ! " He had gone on, never t h i n k i n g where ho was going, until now he found himself outside the long stretch of the houses, and was un-der the green troes and in tho midst of the fields. The lark sang over-head, the thrush and the blackbird rang out their r ichest notes; In the branches above him a crowd of spar-rows met and chirped tho v e r y loudest, merriest music they had e v e r learned. A n d there, in the sunset . Jack leaned on a gate and let h i s soul flow out to God in help-lessness and sorrow and longing.
I t was qui te dark before he passed in at the squal id court whore he lived and turned wi th a s i g h Into his wretched home. Poor J a c k , b i s heart was v e r y sot-e through that night, and, asleep o r awake, again and again the words came sadly to his l ips, " I spoil all tho m u s l o . "
T h e next day he w a s up and off a t daybreak. V e x e d and desperate aa
as he was, he went a t his w o r k w i t h a g r i m fierceness, without a word for a n y b o d y . H i s mates w e r e used to b i s moods, and did not oare to in-ter fere wi th bim at t imes liice t h e s e
" J a c k is out again about s o m e ' a t , " said thoy, with a jork of tho t h u m b in his direction.
They might stop for dinner, but Jack snatched at a bit of broad and worked on; they might pack up at the s t r i k e of tho clock, but so long as tho l ight lasted Jack would s t ick at it.
J a c k ' s lit was on tho next d a y , much to the s u r p r i s e of his m a t e s — the brow knit and the l ips t ight and tho work tlylng on at a tremendous pace.
" W h y , Jack, l a d , " c r i e d one, " a r t thou putt ing a week o ' work into a day, that thou mayst g o on a s p r e e all tho rest of it? "
" N o , " said Jack, so gruffly that nobody had a word for him again , and so it lasted Wednesday, T h u r s -day and Friday. All that was s trange enough, and set his work-mates wondering, but s t rangest of all W08 it when that Saturday after-noon came and Jack took up his wages without a word and just walked right away from them.
" J a c k ' s mad," said they. " N e v knew his tit to last so long as this . '
" N o w , " said Jack, taking a s t r ide just double the usual length, and putt ing his foot down as if he meant to g e t through the other side of the earth, " I ' l l try and get the music back a g a i n , " and Jack meant to smile, but he had to put his mouth tight and to knit his b r o w s to keep back a tear. " B y G o a ' s h e l p , " Jack added, devoutly
When he come home he e v i d e n t l y was not expected, indeed, was scarcely wanted. T h e wife l ifted her face in surpr ise , and went on with her s c r u b b i n g . W h a t e v e r this coming home meant, nothing ever brought her any good.
I^K)r Jack, he seemed to hear it all. "Spoiled her music, too ," ho sighed. Ho hung up bis bag of tools on thoir peg and took off tho apron that was rolled about his waist, and then he caught s i g h t of that very venerable and hair less scrubbing-brush. " I t will help to brit>g back the m u s i c , " said Jack to himself, purposing to buy his wife there and then a new one, but the purpose was somewhat delayed. J u s t then, from some corner of tho room, came the cry of tho baby. Tho wife was r i s ing up to g e t a t it when Jack dived in after the l itt le bundle of r a g s and fetched It out.
" i n hold her a b i t , " said J a c k , rather s h y l y .
J a c k ' s wife would like to have said, " T h a n k y o u , " but she f o l t s h y , too. " N o w , Jack , t r y and mend the m u s i c , " said be to himself, and that time he really did smile, for the baby w a s unused to s t r a n g e r s , and none w a s a g r e a t e r s t r a n g e r to it than i ts own father, so It j u s t cr ied out lust i ly . T h e good wife s c r u b b e d on. T h e r e were t imes when s h e had to let It ory a bit, and t h i s should bo one of them. Jack took It tender ly into his a r m s and chirped to it, and chirped louder, but st i l l It cr ied. Then Jack took it u p in his h a n d s and danced it to and fro and began to s l u g , s o f t and low at first, a s a man who w a s fee l ing his way. B u t sti l l the baby oried, A n d the good wife rose from her sorub-b i n g to take it herself . Jack would t r y onoe more; it rea l ly w a s not pleasant to be beaten Hire this , s o he set h im resolute ly , and then rftng out an old s o n g of long a g o wi th all
i'N
thoforce of h is voice. Tho effect was magical. T h e baby stopped us if ii was charmed; it opened its inoulh in Imitation of tho father 's , it lai<l hold firmly of tho w h i s k e r s with little tangled (Ingers a s if It wouM keep bim at it, and then it lauglied and uruvred with dolight. T h o p(M>i wife looked on and smiled; it wa.s a s t range smile, as If she had got out of tho way of It, but It staid lunge 1 than you might have thought.
" K h , Jack, it is good to hear th s muslo a g a i n , " s h e said, very <|uioi
ly.
Poor Jack, it almost put him out He did stop for a moment, but in stantly the little face puckered and wrinkled Into all sorts of line.s, the nose was squeezed together, and the l ips began to q u i v e r with tho cominj; c r y . Then Jack had to s t r ike oiT again, only to find the effe<-l as magical as before, and to hear the baby laughing and c r o w i n g m u e more. And in tlie midst of it all there came In the two little maidens to tind the father leaning against tin-wall making music like thi.s
" W h y , we couldn't think whoevei it was. father, " said they, woniler ing, and without the merriaieni fading from their e y e s this time.
They sat at tea, silent and s h \ , everyone of them wondering ••.\cept the tjaby , that kept s t retching out its arms U) the father, and found a new delight in pull ing at his whisk ers.
i'oor Jack, he wanted all his thoughts about him to siky wliat lie found it so hard to say, but words wouldn' t come, and the most elo quent would tind it hard to talk wlion a tiny hand was being thrust in one's mouth and another t u g g e d at tho beard. So Jack had to con tent himself with putting his hand into bis ixH^ket, and taking out one sovere ign and one half sovere ign, ho g a v e them to his wife.
" W h a t ' s this. Jack? "she asked, going to tho window, for it was got t ing darkish, and she feared the first glance had deceived hor.
" W a g e s , " said Jack , g e t t i n g It out as best he could.
TheiMXir wife looked at tho money and then she looked at him. She bit each of tho coins, and then looked a s if sho would like to apply her l ips at least to J a c k ' s . Hut sho p u t the money in hor pocket, and folt that if th is t h i n g wont on she would have to-sing, too.
" I ' l l stay and tako caro of tho lit-tle ones if you want to g o out, w i f e , " said Jack. T r u e , It was spoken with some intorruption, and more than one word was bobbed l»ack into the mouth by that litMo hand. Hut It went down into the go<id w i f e ' s heart and btlrrod music she had not heard for many a long day.
" B l o s s thoo, lad I I t is good of t h e e , " said the wife, and then she blushed l ike amaidon thats l ioshould have said so muoh.
" ' T i s ai l thine, wife, so don' t be a fra id , ! ' said J a c k , as the wlfo went Out at tho door.
S h e turned book with a groat stare. S h e had taken the half-s o v e r e i g n and put the other in tho m y s t e r i o u s d e p t h s of her d r e s s .
" A l l t h l s i " said she. " W h y , J a c k , w h a t m u s t I do with i t ? "
" B u y t b y s c l f a new sorubblng-b r u s h , and g e t tho baby a new frock
{Omttnwd lo page 14.)
- m>
y o u h g s o u t h .
^r. 1 . A U J I A D A Y l ' o a BAiU«, iW.lor ii,i»Hi second rtUMi, Oii»ujnci««», Toon..
,, wuom <ommunle»lloii»for ihlii dewtmeni be »«Wrwu«4.-Voun« South Motto
" i h S I i MMbl. K0kur», J»P»n. irU Sikii franolMti. 0»>.
rho Word of God grew and mul-
ii,„„.,| " -Luke In "Acts of tho Apoo-
Mission Hubjocl for March, Japitu.
Th.) Soulhoin lUpVlBt Convonlion
,„«.„,-.1 Its missionB lo Japan In 1880.
11 ,„.w had »ix ininBlonarloii at work,
liy four native ChrlHtiauH.
I „,.rr arc two proachlnu ulfttionB and
„i,n one organized church, with a
„„„.i.orBhlp of forty, l^ast year throe
bapiUod. There aro IM attend
lilt' Sunday Bchooi.
Notes on Japan.
l ii.i «iroolB in ihocitloB are very nar-
I'he houses arc low, tho rooms
piirtliloDod off by paper Bildcs. Tho
Kiu h.Mi U In iho from of tho i.ou»e,
Hi,- i.arlor In tho rear on the garden.
I I,.- |.ooplo are small iu stature. They
»u 1.11 ilie niats «in the floor
H .v»iiion» do not cnanKC in Japan.
In r..Kyoand a few other principle
, 111. . the *oincD are, however, adopt-
,111' (xrelt'n c«)»tuineB.
(,ir;» do i.oi attend school as much
iHOK. owInK to a heathen prcjudlw
.liritiuHi women being oUucated. Tnis
u gradually chan|tlnit for the better
soii.H.ls for «lrlB are bclnKCstablUhed.
(ilrU KKn^rally marry at slxtoen or
x-veutoou.
A Japanese woman of high station
doc» her stiopplnir generally at home
I'no ciork brings a bundle of goods
uiero for hor lospoctlon. At tho store
when a woman has nolsticd purchasluK
Aiiil BtartR 10 loavo, tho salesman bids
.i.iii-ii with loud ehoulB, oxpresslnjr
UuTi-by thanks for her favors.
riiij women of Japan are not ashamed
Ki toll thoir ages.
tiUi women are vory highly respool-
I'li
Tho Japanese from high to low are
inuMieoly patriotic.
V\'hlio Instead of black Is used for
iniiiirnlnif.
lUco, lea and silk are largely pro-
iluced.
.It\pan could toach Spain iesBons of
lamianUy In treatment of prUonere of
war and dofonaoless men, women and olilldron.
Tho Japanese language Is one of tho
inoet dinioull in the world to loarn.
It takoB an American tlve or six years
10 M|K3ak It correctly. One way the
mlHulonarloB got acooBB to the Japa-
neno at Qrst was through those who
uould 8|>oak ChlnoBe.
l.arKo numbers of Japanese are mov-
InR t<» Formosa to go Into buslnesB.
ThlB Island was coded to Japan by tho
( 'hlneBo as a result of the late war.
There Is no law In Japan more rig-
Idly enforced than that against tho
iiHo of opium. It IB B u p p o B o d this law
will work groat changei In Formosa,
now under Japanoso government.
About 30,000 lOBt their UVOB from
tho great tidal wave June 15, 181HI, in
northwoBtorn Japan. It IB isld that as a resuit of that awful dUaBtor tho
iwoplo have lost faith in their old re-ligion and are now looking towards
Chrlatlantty.
In going to Japtin our mlBilonarlOB
go dlrootly aeroBB the continent and
tako thlppittg at San PranolBOO or
Bomo other weitern seaport and oross
tho Paolflo. Our mission stations In
Klushu are about the same latitude as
norOi Georgia, Alabama and Missis-
sippi.
The Nma Twk Svmiiig Poit •ayi' "Tht»wakla( of Japan from that
groat Mluup ID which the Kast has lain
for a thousand years, appears llkuly
to prove tho most serious ovent of re-
cent history."
Young South Correspondence
Have you road thoso dry statistics
about Japan just above'!* If not, tro
back and takothoiu In slowly, thought-
fully. "80 llttlodonelnolKhiyearsI"
Did somobody nay thai'^ Well Watch
tho next olfht yuars. Did you over
notice when the builders be^ln a ^reat
houBO, bow nlowly tho foundation
comes up'!" SonictlmeH for weeks and
weeks we cannot seo the work or the
woukmen at aM. It U all iKsueath the
surface. Then thoy reach the street
level, and little by little tlie ponderous
Htoiieo are put each In HB place, after
Its s|«JClal preparation, cemenUid to
Ilk fellow by tho mortar, and the wall
upon which the teinplo or hall Is to
rest, goes up slowly, a trifle higher
eatrh day, a trlllo lonijer, and IhonI
Like maple tho ijcautlful structure
prowH an wo behold Let us hope that
this lb what Is (foint! on In Japan.
Our busy aiWslon workers are quietly
and hurely laylntt the foundation of
ChrlHl's Church In Japan When this
Id done, God's work will jfrow and
oiulilply Do not fall luio the error
that this l» all tho work that ChrUtlaos
are doing In this land of tho Ulslng
Sun. This U only tho work of South-
ern UapllBts, and tho^e are all sU-
lloned on Kyusher, only one of the
many Islands that make up ihie king-
dom There arc many other mission-
aries, sent out by the .Nortnern Boards
and by KnglUh Christians, and In 18W
about 40.000 Christians wore reported
throughout the Sunrise Kingdom. Bui
glBce then the war with China has
greatly disturbed religious matters
and progress has been slow. Let us
pray that all hlndrani-es may bo over-
come, and Japan be brought u. Christ.
Are you not glad we can kw. used In
this grand laying of the foundation
BtonesV Our dear missionary repre-
xonts us, as she toil, so bravely In
her ll-.iie corner of this mlphiy empire.
I feel grateful for Ihe honor laid
upon u» of assisting In keeping her
in thlH white field. Wo have not done
what we wished, what we hojxja to do,
but thank (jod for what we have been
allowed to 00 and may he help us to,
pay every dollar required for her sup-
port durlnK our fourth year! Do 1 not
hoar a loud, lonn "Ameul " to thatV It
begins here In Tennessee, the center of
our over-wldonlng circle. It echoes
back from the Atlantic Coast to the
Kocky Mountains and reverberates
from tho tar I'acllic. Mexico catches
up the far refrain, and all up and down
the Mississippi Valley the young i>eo-
plo and tho older pooulo with young
hearts shout "Amen and Amen!" Mrs.
Maynard shall bo Indeed and truth
" T H E VOUNU S O U T H M I S S I O N A K V .
We will make her our own.
This Is the last time wo como togeth-
er for this third year. I am just a lltllo bit disappointed that there are
not moro of us today. But I daro Bay there aro over so many who meant to
bo " in at tlie death," and who have
forgotten that our last IBSUO for March
iB on tho 25th, and also what I have
Bo ofton told you, that my "copy" goos
In ton days ahead. You aro just a bit
belated, and we will not weep over It,
because your coming will help u . make
anoncouraglng beirlnnlng to our fourth
year, which comos in with April 1st. I
shall toll you then just what has been
dono with every penny of tho handBomo total you have ralsod during this
yoar, and you will bo fain to say that
we are holding to our motto. We have
gone steadily forward. I sot no limits
to our work next year. Upward and
onward 1
But these last letters are waiting. Bead them with me. Bell 's oomes first!
"i'loaso And onalused 11.75, 11 from
grandma and tho roBt from mo, for
Mrs. Maynard "
MUDA B m i X I K S . Thank you! It Is BO beautiful for
the trrandmothor to work with the
child. WeshallhoiKjtosoethomhand.
In-hand another year.
And Mississippi sends us greeting
through another dear old saint:
"Please find unclosed t l tor Japan,
trusting tho good Master will bless
Mrs. Maynard's overy effort for good.
1 am an old lady, and I can not do
any work myself, but I try to help In
this way as much as I can, God bless
the Young South In Us noble efforts
for the Master's cause." MRS. E . A DOYLE.
I daro say Mrs. Doyle works dally
and hf)urly In the Lord's servlco by
hor life and hor example. We thank
her so much for her offering, and we
know God will bless It abundantly.
Hor prayers strengthen our bands.
Texas brings good tidings:
"1 am a iruo friend lo Uio Youug
South and all It represents. I watch
with anxious Interest the work they
aro doing. My prayers are with ihem
and all who work for the advancement
of our Father's kingdom. My circum-
stances aro so straitened that I am
able to do llltle else but pray. This
mite was thrown unexpectedly In my
way, and I consecrate It to the cause
of our Savior, who was the first mis-
sionary. Send It to Mrs Maynard,
and may the blessing of the Lord go
with It. 1 cannot join your band, but
1 do pray for It." A FIUKND TO MISSIONS.
Ah; we can't agreeU) that. All who
road this page belong to us, and we
are so grateful for your prayerful In-
terest. We cannot let you (to May
there be bright days ahead!
And here's South Carolina. We
are gathering from all quarters this
last time:
• Knclosed tind «1 for our missionary
In Japan. I wish 1 could send 1100.
May success crown the noble effortfl
of the Young South In Its great work!
I pray earnestly that this offering may
do some good In tho wide field of mis-
sion work." K . L PAGE. Wo are deeply Indebted to this friend.
We beg that sho will try to interest
others another year. We would like
so much U. have a "South Carolina
Band. "
Now we como back to Tennessee.
Cranberry brings In an earnest, help-
ful little circle:
" I wish to join tho Young South
Band. I will soon beeleven years old,
and 1 have one little sister and three
llitlo brothers We all want to work
for our missionary this next year.
Mamma says wo must earn tho money
that wo give by helping hor. We each
sond 10 cents for Mrs. Maynard."
A L H K K T B U R H O W B ,
S P U R U K O K B D K H 0 W 8 ,
F H A N K I E B U R R O W S ,
BAHV JAMES BORHOWH, J K 8 9 I K NORA BURROWS.
I am glad wo aro to close with such
a Bweot letter aB that Would there
wore dozens of such home bandsl Can't
you form one? Mamma Is (julto right
about earning your own offerings. I
hope you will come to us ofton next
year. May you all bo blost In your
offortB, oven tho tiny baby. Ho will
have to "earn' ' his iionnles by being
Bweot, won't ho? Let us see how many
h o m e olroles will follow the example
of those dear llltle ones.
Last week 1 overlooked a letter, and
in some unaoouuntablo way It dis-
appeared. I have tho money safe,
however, and If 1 have not credited It
oorreotly. will Ro i a Moore please
write mo Immediately?
Now, we must say "Oood-bje.'VThe third year of our pleasant communings !• dead. Hurrah for the fourth jearl
Who will be first 10 give us glad greet-
ing? I thank you from my heart for
all tho sweet help you have rendered
me. We have made many new friends
In this past twelve months, and I
think we have lost few old ones. I
have enjoyed every week of the whole
fifty-two, and so I hope have you all.
Let UB begin anew with a prayer for
the Holy Spirit's guidance, and a firm
reBolve to do the very best we can in
tho days to come. If you have been
holding back for a "convenient sea-
son," it IB here. Commence with us.
Affectionately and gratefully your
loader, LAURA DAYTON EAKIN.
Recelptt-
First b»lM«»r Third qu»rter Jsouarj oOsnng.. Fenruary aBsrlni . . . First week in Msrch... SeooDd week to Hsrcli. Tbird week Ui Uareb..
.|3t0 M
. 1(6 n » w
.. («la
.. 1UT4 1< W
. a 15
roB iArAW. kodmotber. UBU'S 1 7S
I 00 . Z5
I 00 10
. to 10 10 to
Muds UrtdMs mndcrsndmoU Mn. E. AnJojle, lllssJsslppl A Friend to Missions 'Texas Ross Moor*. West Vlrglnls Alben Barrows. OiMbera Spurceon Burrows, arftstwrrj Frsnkle Burrows, Granberry Jktoes Burrows, Gnuiblrrj JewleN. Burrows, Orsnberr;
Total ® Recelpusince April 1.199«:
:: « • jtmesC. Wsrner, Jr.. Fund ... 81 S7 •• Colportsge w w • HomeBosrd.^ - Orpbkoxe Chrlstmks gifts & SO •• Mexico , » •• Bute Mlsilons I « " PoBtac«
Toul for rear ending Msrcb t»1 ®
A Serious Drawbacic.
The greatest blow to missions In
Japan has been the action of the ttus-
tees of the DoshlBha Unlversliy (Con-
gregational) at Kyoto. It has been
the law In Japan that no foreigner
could own property anywhere In the
Interior; hence when the missions put
up buildings for missloo work, the
property had to bo held by naUve
Christians. (This law will be abro-
gated In 1900.) The American Board
had built some fine buildings, and the
work was about the largest in Japan.
Unfortunately the trustees, or some of
them, cared more for themselves than
for the BuocoBS of Christian mlsBlons.
and Informed the missionaries that
they wore no longer needed, that the
natives could carry on the work. So
tho American missionaries are left
without homes or workshops, and, as
tho property is in tho name of natives,
there is no legal redress. It is feared,
and with reason, that tho trustees will
"swing the Institutions away from the
Christianity of Its founders." This
is anexoeedlngly deplorable condition,
and makes the heart ache. At pres-
ent tho missionaries of this church are
living in other parts of Japan and
carrying on the work as best they can.
-litv. J. minor Wahir.
BABY'S MUW AA Wftnn IMlill Willi ff Ert'i^ttoMofiTtlngs wim Cimo«aA(oU». iiMmr),UWKtMt skin GUI*.
J E T B n ¥ H U H O B " S S l T O IMVS*.
"m.
ii
l i i BAPTIST A N D REFLECTOR , MAKCH 25, l o u l .
Macl i tn l i l amp-ch imneys a n
p c i k i t , iR'siiles be i ng n>adt
lit ^^'lass.
Ku i \oii w a n t the o n e that
1. in.ulc i)! ' you r him|>. I < >
u . sc iul N ou tlK- Index ; I'rrt
I > \ M a c b e l h -
RECENT EVENTS
—Hev. H II Schramm has rfcenily
helJ a 8ucce»*(ul mtHitlru at the Souih-
slde Baptist Church, Kufaula. Ala
—Rev W. II Karle has entered
upon hU ministry as pastor of Iho
Baptlbt church at Abbeville. S C
— Rev Robert L. Bowman, of Dan-
ville, Ky . has accepted the call to the
pastorate of the Baptist church at
Versailles. Ky.
-Rev. G \V. Rlloy of Brookhaven,
Miss , has oecn elected to the presiden-
cy of Clinton College, Kentucky, and
has alreaiiy entered upon his duties.
-The white Baptist churches of
Missouri number 1.754 The preachers
1 2"9 The metabfrphlp In thesechurch-
e* 07s. rh<> pain last year was
ovt-r 10.000.
Ta>!rc t« more c«itkrrb In ibla s cHod ot tbe ccuotry »han oltitr <li»e»-e» pul together *A I AN U tbe L.u)t TCW yars suppo^eJ to b« ID-curahl • K"o-» great ir»nj jre«r- iliKtors pro Douncrd ItsliCkIa scua, a ndp r cKc r t oe J looikl rcmeaies. »qJ bt con<.i*ntly 'all'.ur to cure iti b i„c»i tr«?*ta:«?ot. rrcnout(*i1 it Incuranl® Sc".enc« b»!t proTco c»iarrh t > be a coisMtu lion .1 iiUcasf. aoJ bt-riffjr* rniair»« coDsilta tloai. lre»itn<! t, UaU« tatarib cu-». maau Taciureo K J CbeorT * <"o . Tolfdo. Oalo.ls the ••nly coomliutljnal cure on tbf m»-k»t It t» iBttriallF in doip a frotn t'-o arops t" » teasp iOBlu l It »ci» d'rectl> ob tbe HlooJ and muiuis sjrfac • of 'be »y»tem Tbej i Oer onr bU'iired ilolUr^ f.ir anycuS" n fall-t d-f)-Seed li)r circulars and tf» luion oU Addf»«
F J CHE.MKV & lO . Tolwlu. O bj- OrOffgUta. The.
—R?v C P. Ervin has accepted the
call of tho Wellford Church and two
other churches '.n SpartanburirCounty.
S C., and will begin work at Well-
ford the flrtl Sunday ID April.
— Younu People's Association* arc
to be held the Qrst week In April In
Kentucky, South Carolina and Flori-
da Besides these, tbe Geor(;la Bap-
list Convnntlon meets In Gainesville
that w»»ek.
—The Sizteooth laternatlonal ChrlH-
tlao Rndeavor CoBTention wlli bo
held In San FrancUco, Cal., July 7-12,
1897. Tbe railroads hare ^tven very
cheap rates and it is ex(>ectcd that
there will be a larifo attendance.
For Nervous Prostration
Use Horsford's Aold Phosphate.
Dr. C. C. Abernathy, Pulaski, Tenn., says: "1 bave used it in many oases of nervous prostration and atonic dyspepsia, and It tias rarely failed to tone up the weakened nervous system and improve the difrestlon."
—Rev. A. C. Wlllclns, recently of
Beaufort, S. C., has acccptcd a call
to the BatoiburK, S. C., Baptist church
and will lieirin work there about the
middle of April. The Haptul Courier says this is ono of the bestohurchos ID
tbe State.
—Thhoat D i sbabrb coromenco with a Cnuffh, Cold or Sore Throat. "BrowtCa Bronchial Troctun" give im-medlato and sure relief.
—The Citadel Square DaptistChuroh
of Charleston, S. O., l i In the midst
of an Interestlnir revival In which the
pastor, Dr. D. M. Ramsey, Is being
assisted by Dr. Carter Helm Jonos of
Louisville. It Is hoiwd that much pood
will result
—The Southside Baptist Church was
orfcanlfod on March 7th at Richmond
Mills near Columbia, 8. C, It starts
off with twelve members. Rev. A. J.
WIllouKhby, missionary of the State
Mission Board of South Carolina, will
be pastor of It
—The Second Baptist Church of
Amorlcus, UoorKla, was organized on
March 7th. About fifty members went
Into the organization, among them
some of the leading citizens of Amerl-
cus. It Is ox|MH!ted that a building
will be crected at once and Amerlcus
will thus have tvo tlourlshlbg Baptist
churchcs
-Rev. Dr. L. C. Barnes, of Pitts-
burg, PA . has collected evidence to
show that George Waithlngion was
baptized at Valley F'orge. by Rev.
John Gano. then a Baptist chaplain
In the array. Three of Mr Gano s
descendants bear tesllmony to thai
effect. It Is not claimed that Wash-
ington became a Baptist, but simply
that he was Immerstd
— Rov. Archibald Browu, the |K.p-
ular London preacher anil favorite
student of Spu'-geon. is ni>» on his
tirst visit to America. Mr Urnwn re-
cently resigned the pastorate of the
Kdst London Tabernacle, which he
held for thirty years The iiieinl>ership
of that chu.ch is over :j OOO. it being
the largest in Knuland next to Spur-
geon s
— Dr. R S MoArthur in a-, address
at the Jubilee Celebration of the Cal
vary ('hurch. New York City. of which
we made mention last week. »ald that
the cLtire church complpl»-.i cost
t iZ'i IX)0. makinif it the costiieol Bap-
tist cliurch In America. The above
amount Included tKM) 000 paid for the
lot on which the house stands, giving
it a frontage of UK) feet, the widest In
the city.
— At a rally of all the young peo-
ple"* Christian societies of the city of
Memphis held at the First .Methodist
Church on Friday night, the I2ih Intl ,
the chairman was authorized by a
unanimous vole of the meeting to ap-
point a committee of thrcu empowered
to draft and forwad resolutions earn-
estly protesting against the past action
of the managing oRlclals of the Con
tennlal Exposition at Nashville In de-
ciding to permit the sale of Intoxicat-
ing liquors within the F]x|M>sltion
grounds while open to the public. A
copy of the resolutions has been sent
to us for publication. ThecOnclusion
of the resolutions is as follows: "A l l
work on the Christian P^ndeavor build-
ing will cease, even though such action
will cause a large pecuniary loss to
tbe Christian Societies; and all mem-
bers of the various Christian louloties,
herein before pamod, in the city of
Memphis, will decline to aid tho Ex-
position In any way by their patronage
or influence, and will urge all similar
Christian organliatlons throughout
the State and country to do likewise;
thus we feel this to bo our bounded
duty as Christian workers marching
under the banner, 'Loyalty to Christ . '"
BesoluUoM.
Whereas, We, the Baptist Church
of Chrlstlanhurg, granted J . N. Mo-
Donald liberty to exeralse his gifts
and talents In a public capacity, be-
lieving then that It was right to do lo ;
and
Whereas, h Is life for sometime past.
BAILEY & TOB1N, FINE TAILORING. B 2 C H U R C H t T R E E T , N A i H V l L L E , T E N N .
Lost Appetite.
Wa have the most eitratltre ta>ada of any tollorlng MtablUhment.
PrioM right. Ntyiwi niftn.data. wnrkmamhip always the hast.
Could M Eat the Most Tempting Dishes.
Many Days Without any Food at All- Can Eat Four Square
MeaU a Day Now-The Cause of the Change.
f'nn/i the Lemtrr, t'levflniiil, Ohio For tbe restoratlm i>' an ap|H«tlt« which ha«
b«>en Impal ed or lo-l tlirounh •loknei.N. no remt y can compart' tn i rt'CiivoDfsn »Ub l»r Williams' I'iDK I'llls f"r I'al- IVopIo VlIh stiktemenl IK »ub»ta> t'Bird b> Ihr mperlpocr and drclaratloiia <if nim aii-l aonou with wboni thru- pill" b TOIlie a houn' ho d humII Inr Am'<D> the maiywUii can fltrr twitltnory lo thl» particular prop, rtv ••f Or Wt'lUmx' I'lnU IMIis^ OrorKK Marnha I Jr wboll\<» at Nu ISNorwIi h Street t li-M-ia OdIo Mr Mar shall U a m-wo aiteul <ili ih.- I.akc Sh' r.- and .MicblKan . ouiheni U.illr. ail aud Ul» itrrit<>ry pilccda from Clcvulat il to Toudu I.IHf ihou naad!! o( otbi>r" who owe lb -.r bralih and vIku' lo Ur IVlliUtns I'ltili I'l Is. Mr Marshall vi v«|r b<-Kl<aUH to rlut; ti.rlr praln.-i'. In bin caff II war uKPK-arj to unr ooly * f w boirs of Itr plIN torri-t.irp h tn to ths lull poi«n»»lor of tK.dll» bfttlib Ills dlK"»l V" o-iiuin bad l>r c.ime 5lu.o«t ucelwi!. ihrouitti ••» Iokk and serl oun llliii'i>s. but It) a "urprl.ii.pU i.rl.-f pf-rlod tbrouiib ihc aKO'Cvof thin wondrrful ni<nllcltw. ihf> were capable ot jgal" iirrforiliini; their fuQCtloDft in a rrKularaPd parfoctlj -iitlnfai'tory manntr. In Darratii.K ill- expt-rleuce «ltli IhdiiMr MMTKrallraid
"Laiit s'r>ng I aran taken Kick aiib mnatn iii.lorv rh.-uai.t'Hin. fi d mv i> .lire nnt-in • dofted/ To rcilne the -».(! nnti " necfs-«»r» to paint m« with Udliie Afi-r iht«-e montbs <r« atm.ut I r>..»ine con>al«scent, but tbe atuck had napp'd in/ xlnMiitlh anl W-ft me eitremelj wr.k and feei.le I could near™ y llfi an arm era les Tbi* wakue»» p< rmeateJ my entire system, and applied »« wfll to m» »i«.m»cb and dlKe«llve apja'atii* a< to my limb» I wKin dlacover'd ibat 1 had lost u.y appctUr almoft ai cooipl-'ely a' thoui|h i
nev»r had one. i had no desire wbamver to partake of any nuurlHhmrnt aod the uatunti rexult wan that my convalercence was ei treniely rlow and iiijr parnnis feareii thai I wai ifnlnK to sulfur a relaps or fall pr«<» to anutbir alimeni on acccunt of my debllltateii condition
Maiya day I woiilJ not lake any nourish iront and whenever I did the i|uant<lT was ((h> RiKnIllcant to mater ally banlen luy mpron. mem I empt'HK disbm wers nrepared t.>r ine, lii|| I mu d not toiicb iht in I IH'Kat' lo becume Wore or li'H« alarmed as did my parRntn. ami one da« my mo h«r »uir*eHted <he purnba-o of K'lme of Ur A'lUuins' t'ink IMIs f >r m- Thej had been rerummended to ber ny a DelKhb jr who ri'Varded ibem a* nothlnR nbort ot ml rtcu ouH. and dwelt no entbusiaiitlcaliv on Iheir excellent i|uaMil>k that motnor »a'« purHua' etl XI try theiii There lo not much in to to tell now. fi-r I don't look l<ke a itau who cannot
I eat ib'er or four NJ are IBCalu a day do I? I Three >Ki»OB ol Or Wlil am* Pink I'llls itieil me <ip an hound ai a dollar, and tin y will do the Kinix for anyoii'-eUe I am sure liwun not loBE alter 1 tK'cnn to use tbe pllln that I could feci miM>lf troprov'nit My slrentfth ii"i;»u to re • urn ai d ...jrtid my aDpetl'c anu I w »» ou the '«.til again tn a ihiirt fme That Is m» e«|)erl enc, and I am Klad lo »Ive II for the henebt ol oihcru who may have Iwt tbeir appi titth tb'ouKb Klckni m '
l>r. Wiiiiami." I'lnk I'llN conlaln. In a cm den»cd form all ti e • lements >iece»«iry to (lire new life and rlrbnr>>i to the bloixl anj re t• r* shattered i.crvw T^ey arc for wale hyall druit
i »l't» or may l>e bad by in llfrt.mllr WIMIams' Mwllclno Co .Schenectady, N Y . for Wo per
I iwi. or si* boles for f J ftU
a<« wolKilleve. has lun l>»'en bwMimintr
a mini-tf-r of C'iirist, rcndorinjr him
and hl« influcncp for nj,<,d of but little
sorvloo In iho mintstrv: iinii
Whereas. He i« nt.t of cood report
of them without, dt<-m II «>iir duty
as a I'huroh of .le»us Christ and to our
dcnomiDation lo uphold a true minis-
try and dlsoourajie those whinn wo be-
lieve from their fruits arc not such:
thoroforc bo It
tiffohtd. That wo n'«clnd tho action
Ifrantlni; such lHHTiifs and pa|)crs of
Ilcento
Hcmlirii, That demand t»f him the
surrender !o this church or its olllcers
tho said Mconsc.
/(rmlreil That In cafc he falls to do
so within one month, we will imbllsh
him In tho cnutiiy paivri and also In
thu denominational |ia|M!rs
HtKOlved, That theHc resolutions lie
spread on our n"cord<.
Done by order of tho church Jan.
23, 18»7. H. K. I'AnHONS, Mod.
H M. Kav, Ch. Clerk.
|>. 8.—IIo has since bix^n Qxoludod
from SwcotwaU'r church. P.
—The sooner you begin to fight tV'c Are. the moro easily it may bo extin* guishad Tho sooner you liegln taking •Ayer's Sarsaparllla for your blood-diseaie, the easier wlH bo tho cure In both oases, delay in dangerous, if not fatal. Re sure you got Ayer's and no other.
—Silver Spring Among tho most
beautiful objects of Interest In Florida
Is tho famous Silver Spring. Tlie
boats Of the romantic Oeklawaha con-
neet at Silver Spring with the trains
of the Florida Central & Peninsular,
midway between Jacksonville and
Tampa. For special Information write
to W . B. Pennington, General West-
ern Agent, or A. O. MacDonoll, Gen-
eral Passenger Agent, Jacksonville,'*
Fla.
WHO'S 8HELLABEB0EB1 Bs's tlis Wlte rraen Mai, Qf All»Bta,a», and sails tbsbcsistd f o r Irrr. MPBt Atlanta, a*.
n ftnv mio vruvi? tfi nuaniB,uii, .nu Is tbs b«si std iihsapwi tsBolnit la nxisianoa
•Ij iiurpa<es. rralflit iwld, Ostalogue r. Wrltnturll. K b. HIlRhtiAtinRaBR.
H A R V E S T B E L L S .
IIY MAJOK W . E. I 'ENN,
Is regarded by all Baptists In the South as tho iMgt song book published Itound and ShaiMHl notes. Prices have been reduced. Sample copy 50 ccnts. Address Mils W K I'E.N.M, Eureka Siirlnirs. Ark . , ur BAITIST AND HE Uf 'I-KCToR. Nashville, Tonn
DR. J P. G R A Y . D E N T I S T .
Nos. 24 & 25 Berry Block.
Corner Church & CJhtirry Sis
N A S H V I L L F . T E N N E S S E E .
JOHN M. OZANNE,
Baker, Confectioner And only Manufacturer of
Entire Wheat Bread. Entire Wheat Flour and
Whcatlott a Specialty.
306 Broad St., - Nashville, Tenn.
TKI KI'HONK 070.
CLOTHING Our stock Is not the larg>
est, but ono of the most
desirable.
We keep up to date gar-
ments for Men and Boys.
Underwear, Neokwear,
Shirts, Eto.
HUNTINGTON. T H E C L O T H I E R ,
409 Ohnwh Bwet. NASHVILLE.
m n a p g g j j g y
CHURCH U k W l ! ^
BAPTIST A N D REFLECTOR , MARCH 25, lb»7 . 18
A New Shrub t ha t Cnret Kidney
and RheuQiatIo Dlienaes—A
Free Gift.
A short time ago our readers wore mmlo aware of a valuable now iMitan-u al discovery, that ol tho Kava-Kava Mhrub. or, as bolanlsts call it, pil)er iiullKjKticum, found on tho banks of tho (ianges river in Hast India. From a ni.-illcal standpoint this Is perhaps Iho must Important discovery of the oen-iiiry Tho use of tho Kava-Kava Shrub, like other valuable mcdlcal >.iit>stancBS, opium and quinine, was ilrst observed by Christian mission-a r i e s among the natives as a sovereign niiit'dy for Kidney diseases and other lIlllladle8cau^od by Uric acid In the system. Since Its general introduction AUavU, (tho Kava-Kaya Compound)
bas wrouirbt many remarkable cures of Kidney and i l h o u m a tlu dls eases.
Mr. U. C Wood, a prominent attor ney of Lowell, In-diana, was cured by A l k a v l s o f Ilneumallsui, Kid
iM.K»vrK*vABiiB«i"y Piprr HelhuUieuwn <, r o u b I o of ten
>oiir'8 stauding. Ho writes:
I l isve been t rea led o u r Borne pUj fs lcUn .t.j w i t b o u i «bo lc»8l Ucntrtll My blsOdor i r i .uh l f nt 'cauie so iroul>li»i>ui<> t n » t I n®" »
up f rom n v e to twe l v e t l tncs du r i ng tbe iiiL-hi l o u r l n s t e . . .
I n t ac t I w a s ID m U e r j tUc w h o l e l l i n « »n<l wan beoomlDB very oo»p<mdeni . • • • > U..W UH«1 AlCav ls 4ii«l urn Ijeltcr t h an I b »ve m e n for l ive y<-«rs I k n o w A l saT l s wil l ruio blaoil-r a nd k i d ney t r o u b l e , , , l i l» u woo .iiTful a n d ( r a n d , good ro i rnny . ' '
And even more wonderful Is the testi-mony of Rev. John H Watson, of Sun-si't, Texas, a minister of the gospel in thirty years' service, stricken down at tils post of duly by kidney dleeaso and cured by Alkavls. Mrs. James Voung, of Kent. Ohio, writes that she had tried si* doctors In vain, that she was about to give up In despair, when she found Alkavls. and was promptly ourod of Kidney disease, and other ailments wccullar to woman. Many other ladles give similar testimony
So far tho CJhuroh Kidney Cure Company, of No. 420 Fourth Avenue, New York are its only Importers, and ihey are so anxious to prove Its value that for the sake of introduction they will send a free treatment of Alkavls prepaid by mail Ui every reader of the l U l T I S T A N O U E F l . r . C T o R w h o I s a
-iifTeror from any form of Kidney or madder disorder. Bright's Disease. KheumatUm. Dropsy, Gravel. Pain In Ua.'k. Pemalo Complaints, or other aflllctlon due to Improper action of ilu« Kidneys or Urinary Organs VVc ndvUo all Sufferers to send their namoH and address to the company-, and receive the Alkavls free To prove Its wonderful curative power- H il s<-f't to you onilroly free
Tft Taarhors " ORAitcnoN-s practicai pook-lU IvaullBle KBKriNO ll.l.l)STRATm>," (or
and nthorfi MO»iK»TVnva»«lf'<tu»clnmi-t«r) dnu UUIVIOl K h o o U and business co l l rK» .
SurceMfuIly ute«l in g i t iera l cUu» work by teacl iet . «vl,o IIAVB WOT h a j l b e a d v a m s g e o ( a bu i nr»« «l,icall<in. W i l l not r c i u l t e m u c h o f the <««rl«tf » t.nie. NothliiK l ike II Issued. P i les In reach of all.
Southern Baptl it Convention.
Biionlii rouie u> Wilmington via "The
Land of tho Sky." The time is at hand
when delei;ates and others who will at-
tend the Southern liaptlst Convention
at Vi llmlngUin, N C , In May of this
year will l)0(fln U) look up the rail-
road schedules and maps to soleot
their roul« of travel All Tennoise-
ans and Kentucklans will note by a
glance at the map that the only route
by which they can all bo collectod,
each State on a sptclal train of Its
own. or tho two Stales together. Is for
them to use the .Southern Railway via
Ashovllle, N I' , through "The Land
of tho Sky '
Spcclal schedules have been arrang-
ed to aocommodatfi delegates and vis-
itors during the Convention week who
may uxe the Southern Hallway through ,
Ashevllle for this occasion, and they I
admirably suit tho convenience of the
entire Tennessee and Kentucky terri-
tory. We^t Ten nesM'nns and Kentuck-
lans can leave home during tbe day,
arrive at Nashville In the evening,
leave Nashville at 11:20 p. ro.. arrive
at Knoxville at H a m for breakfast,
leave Kncxvllle at 8:l.'> a. m. via Mor-
rlstwwn, at wbich point they will be
joined by delegates frona Johnson City,
I'rlstol. Jonesboro. Greenevlllo and
Kogersvlll . tbenc the rout® Is on
through Hot Siirlnps. N. C., Ashe-
vllle. N (' , along the French Broad
Klver, over tho Blue Ridge Moun-
tains and through "The Land of the
Sky," the most beautiful scenery east
of the Rockies; thcnce through Ma-
rlon, Statesvllle, Salisbury, Greens-
boro. N. C., arriving at Wilmington
at 7:2.5 a m Returning a special
schedule hat been arranged to leave
Wilmington at IO::iO p. m. after the
Convention is over, also affording a
daylight ride, returning through scenic
Western North Carolina and East Ten-
nessee. Regular schedules now In ef-
fect also afford desirable connect'ons
via this route dally. Delegates from
Middle and Kastorn Kentucky can
oomo South through Harriman Junc-
tion or Jollloo iind join Tennesseans
at l{noxvilleon this same route. W .
H Doll, T. P. A , Chattanooga, Tenn
UooKB Given Away.
Recently a hundred "Crisis of Mis-
sions" wore offered free to the pastors
of our Convention on certain condi-
tions,, t h e pasters wrote us quickly
for them so that not only were the
hundred taken, but another lot, which
were glvon by a different party from
tho llrst, were all readily sent out.
The requests continue to come for the
books, and, as wo have no moro for
frea distribution, arrangements bavo
been made to send tho book to an>one
who will send 2.'> cents. This can be
sent In post-oRIco order or in stamps,
li KNTS W ANTEI>-MKN and WOMEII Jo, ihr (>-.( .nil /af'i«»»»l*wli««
THE STORY OF. i f UFE » / / M f t n / -1 • L i v e n n o r e
kam, .%»«» rawn; AsrnU Wa«l»4-<mlr o"* Aar m>a or
• 100 • nHinth • th t »• Wt I'm /v'!o«t « w for «o a : i». » tfMTIIlNtiT«.N A CO.. UartV|.r4. Vmmm.
HALL'S Vegetable Sicilian
HAIRRENEWER Boautiflos and restores Gray
II nr to its "^.'Iginal color and
I vitality: prevents baldness;
uf( 1 itcMng and dandruff.
\ ( lO hair dressing. 111 I & Co., Pro|» . N sslms, N. H.
» .|.i iiy'nil hruggUU.
''iin iVr
and will include the postage (seven
cents) on the book. It would be well
for members of many of our churches
to And out if tbeir pastor has this
book, an i , if not, to make him a
present of the same. Every pastor
ought to have a copy. If you wish to
accept this offer, write at once to R.
J . Willingham, Corresponding Secre-
tary, Richmond, Va.
When you deal with the "old relia-
ble" GEORGE ZICKLER & CO., yoo
are always treated justly and honor-
ably. Call and see up
T I - i E C "
Morton-Scott-Robertson Co., DEALERS IN
Furniture, • Carpets, • Mattings, Oil Cloths, Lace Curtains, Etc.
We make a specialty of church furnishings.
. Before purchasing write to or call on
The Morton-Seott-Robertson Co., 216 N. Summer Street. Nashville, T.
P R O M / / | \ \
COLLEGES 30 Days. Sl>eclsl rales to Schools niid Teocliers. Snnipte cnplei sent f o r e*aii i l i i«l loii . W r l l e for i.rk-es ami cIr. u ta r t showl i iKSome o f Im Siwclid AdvmiiftRts, l l l u i t ra t lo«s , t tc . (Me i i l l o i i l h l * imper). Aildress
D R A U G H O N ' S Practical Business College, Nuhyllls, Tenn., or Tswrkins, T««i.
"I'sop. Dkavohon-I irnriieil bookkeeiiliiK si home (torn your liook, while lioWlfiR n JKMUIOII « «
night leleKraph operator." C. B. I-BI'I'INUWKLI., Bookkeeper for Oerber ft „ , ,,,
Wholesale Grocers, S. Chk«K».
Buy vour Grncerlos from tho nld re-
liable GEORGE Z ICKLER & CO.
R e O l l l n f f I n b a l e n .
fMtures do. Bo, they will ^ " ' fonig ' and will last longer. Ust them come Jn liy the thousandi.
THE PEOPLE'S CASH GROCERY, BRIDGE AVENUE AND THE S Q U A R E —
21 lbs. bi'sl IKwlon O r a n u l a t e d Sugar 1 00 VI I I . . W l m r CUr l f l r d 8uK«r 1 W Vrt IhK Coarm. O t a n u l a l f d 8UK«r I W 28 IbK crop Now Or lean i . . u g a r . ^
•.HI ll.«, l>.-«l lA-iif Urd I W 10 II,» dry Pa l l Uacon ' ^
Kam-y I1«"«H Strlpn. . • " J IW',<l Sugar-Cured Slmuldi-rs. >»•
•Ir
r.io Country Hog J'>*l8
Country Shoulders.
CiiiiiitVy llatii'^
lUiMoii l l n m s . 3 l o B Iba. , on ly . . " K lour has u dvnnc i d . n> don I bt> d.-,'..|ved by g - l ' l n g l u . t a . Rood for t h r
for nud l a k e no o ther b u t Mal lard »
O b o u l k or A l l l « l a . for thoy are the
iNifD pH l on t a-on l y . . • •• •• • • • • " llont wnlcr-groi ind m e a l , per b u J " IVa r l Menl. p " I'Prk , .i«i„ r „ m . , . h a . l o n . o d o w i i - « K0«m1 art icle. ^^
"a» K n i i e r n coITct k i n g a a rp Waging « « r . .n iong l h . .m . o l v e . o n pr ice . , now iH your l i m e m . l ock up . wh i l e It I "
low
7 Ihs Li'vprinjis' Fninous Pack-
UH(« c( ITi't' for " "
1 lb. uncolored J a p a n Tea. p u t up In a genu ine aouven ir J a p a n e i e b a . k e l at IcM t h a n half pr ice, on l y «
3 cana E a r l y J u n e Peaa f ' \ cana Sugar Co rn »
I cana Deal 3-lb. Tomatoea .1 large c a n . Tab le Peaches ^ 4 c a n . Ca l i f o rn i a Peaches M i cana Ca l i f o rn i a Ap r l eo t a . . W
5 .poo ls best Mach i n e Th read M r I-lb. ba r s Saxon Soap 8 large bars ^ le r raan S o a p . . . . . . . »
10 bars Amer i c an Soap , a b e a u t y . . . . . » 10 bara W h i l e Soap , as good as
Spurloc.k "8 Bluo irlven fn-p with
Kddy 8 New Process Utundry
Starch, botti'r than plastic, only
10 wn t s
I vory , If n o l b e t t e r . . . H lb . , largo L u m p S l a r ch , o n l y
Now Ca r ame l Dr ipa on l y K lne . t S o r g h u m , o n l y . . . . . PUk l l i iB V inegar , per ga l l on . . .
l lesl p ick les , sma l l s l i e , pe r gal 3 boxea Amer i c an Sard lnea f o r . . . . . . . 2 boxea 8-o«. Uru ton ' s or Oar ro t l s
1 m." Famous • iiiiitle Axe" Tobfcco,... S nickel CIgara, lust think of II. for.. Corn, per buahel,
» 2S 20 30 16 IR to
l U g very best B r a n 1 W Ch i cken Keea, per bushe l . New Pickled H o g Keet, per doxen. . . »» New Pick led H o g Keet. In k i t s ^ 0 ga l lons l l o a d l l g h l O i l , o n l y «
I J n i cke l loaves o f Bread for >» I Best French Maca ron i , per packagc . ' on l y
1 J lbs. best F u l l C r e a m Cheese » 1 lb . good C r e a m C h e e s e . . . . . . . w
1 6 lbs. New n i c e , c lean a n d w h i l e . . . . . . » i 12 lbs. Ro l led Oa l a , t he m o d e r n break-
fast »
' 4 packages of Scotch O a U »
20 Iba. K l ln-dr led H o m i n y . , . . . » No r t he rn N a v y Bcana , per g a l l o n . . . . IB Ulack-oyed Peaa, per g a l l o n . . . . . . . . . . w
F r u i t Je l l lea . l lrst q ua l i t y , SO- h. pa s TO F r u i t J e l l l e . . n ra t qua l i t y . 15-lb. pal la 40 P u r e F r u i t Preserves, W-lb. p a l l a . . . . } TS Pu r e F r u i t Proservea, M-lb. pa l l a I W Pu r e F r u i t Preserves, IB-lb. p a l l a . , . . 1 oo Sho t , a l l sixes, per l b . . » F ancy Evapora ted App lea . 4 lbs . , for » t iun-drled App les , 8 Iba., for *5
7 lbs. best Ca l i f o r n i a Evapora ted
Pcachea J Iba. best Ca l i f o r n i a Evapora ted
^ J lbs. beat Ca l i f o r n i a Evapora ted ^
4 f b i r ' ^ V Ca i l f o rn i a Pee ied 'Peachea BO
Ca l i f o r n i a P r une s , l a rgo a n d Ju icy , 4Vi
lbs for ^
No r t h e r n D u r b a n k P o U l o e a , pe r b i j . . BO
swee t PoUtoes . pe r H b u IB
i
(
r a , . , w. . • nsllsrd s Obelisk Flour and U.ilsrd's Obtllak Dak.
S LEAHY & SONS, n n i D U B AVAWWI! A P I ' B L I O BQUARK
;
TMI, 48n.
B A P T I S T A N D K E F L E C T O U , M A l U ^ l l 2 5 .
The Man Who Spoiled the MuHo. (CtoiiMiiMrf/'WH pagf to.)
for Sunday,"and this time Jack did smilo.
The wife came nearer; she couldn't help it She stood for a moment plui'klnx up oouroKo, then she put her hand on bis shoulder and stooped down and kissed the baby, ond took a long time over It, too.
"I should like to g ive thee one, too, " she sjild as shyly as iwssible; and she did it splendidly, ond th.-n hurried away
"1 think the musU'Is coming back again. " said Ja.-k to himself
I^ter that night, after hi?» wife lame back, Jaik went marketing, and a couple of . hairs were se t by the fire. "C.ood kind of musl.al boxes, ' said Jack to himself, as he brought th»nn In at the door and set each in its place. .Vnd, there about the fire, they sat, silent for awhile, the baby asleep and the little maid-ens at her side.
"Come, little ones, you must s ing to mother and me." said he at last. •• l am so glad,' you know."
And they looked at each other with a wonder that soon passed into sunshine and joy. and before they knew it Jack and his wife joined with them Poor Jack broke down before he had gone on long; then the nthers broke down, too, and all was still for awhile, until Jack wiped away his tears and looked up cheerily.
"Eh. but I mustn't spoil the music like this. Sing on, little ones ." And they did sing, and Jack sang, and his wife And then Jack did as he hadn't done for many a day; knelt down with his wife and chil-dren and asked God to help them and bless them, to forgive the past, and to strengthen him for the future. -E.r ^
B U S I N E S S E D U C A T I O N At Home, And Six Months Sub
icrlptlon lo lewllnc p»p«r>-«ll foronlr H 00 ioli'»
8<« ipecral offer (oUowlDgthliartlole. mwle bTProf J. F. Draaibon, Prftldent of Drkusb-on'* PraotlMl Bnsloeu Colleirn. Nk»hTirie, Tenn., Bcd Tezkrksn*, T«s. The reputation of Prot Dr»ii«boD'aCon*(M»DD merluor bis pabllcktJonasre too well u d hvoikbly known For u« to fartber comment. It would alio be uMleM to comment OD tbeadvutaceixf • bu*l-nets education. One mar not bare an oppoiton-Itr of attending a boslneasoollefe, •tlllonemay bare tbe cbance to seoure a falrl* good busi-ness education at borne at but Ifttr* cost, bj aoceptlng tbe special offers made below: '•For a limited time In order to advert se his books Prof. Draugbon makes two special off«ni as etplalned below. Wban ordering SITS name of paper you noticed this offer In, and addreas all orders to J. F. Draugbon, President, Nasb-rllle. Tenn. _
OrriR Mo. I.-One eopjr ot DRAConoiiB PRACTICAL BOOKKURAIO-RIXDBTHANO post-paid, and subsorlpUon to either paper, only I I T h i s book Is MipeolallT adapt;^ to hone study and to class work. Orer «0 different teachers and colleges ordered It In 80 days. A person can by tbe study o( It acquire, without the aid of a teaeher, a much better knowleilge ot bookkeeping than can he Mqulred from many other teii books, even with the assist ance of a teacher. ESTRAOR: "Prof. Draugbon; erstor, I learned bookkeepl nff at hoiDO from *ou^ book, for which I paid onlyM.M 0. B. LI ' - • • - — •
While holding a position as night telegraph op-ned bt " • wblcl . .
Lefflngwell, Uookkeeper for Oerbert * Flcks, Wholesale Orocers, South Obloago, III."
Orran Not —Onecopy of DIIADOAOH'R MAN-UAt. OM DDSIHUR Wnrrnio. postpaid, aod sub-scilptlon to any ot the papers mentioned onl* ll.oJ. Regular prlee of this book alone Is II00. A book of 40 pages prepared for home stud* and for class work, ^evaluenf a good busi-ness hand would bo hard to estimate, iiy the study ot this book at home this accomplish-menl may be acquired.
TAKR Onotoi.—As alMT« ei^ia'nrd, stleot onib Jiberl
terlan, llavnet and Refltotor. Amnrlean Out-look, Beml-Wfokly American, NashvllUi Hols-ton Methodist, Kn.wTtlleiOommerolal-Appeal,
either paper mentioned iMlow pi two they are twelve montns) witn eith-
er book! Qospel Advocate, Cumberland Presby-Dtlst " ~ - - -
llleiOommerolal-Appeal, Mempblsi OourlerJoiirnal, Home and nrm. - hodlsland Wayof tHe.Coult - •
thj AtU rimfdV dr .LadUw' Hdme^ (foi
Methodist and Way of tj frnOuillvator, BUBI ~ FreePressi Oolden
' of tile, Lot ay Biiutfa. A< ) Rule, Host
„ BoutL Atlan^Detrol
nt ii
inn and Oea twelve months). Bnrlnglleld, Obloi
Methodist. cfaUettsb)brg, Ky.i Faots and Flo* tloni. Uhlcago.
R. O —For new sabsorlbers nnly. PHY8I0IANB P R 1 8 0 H I B B K 0 F 9 L I N E
I'ltEMlUMS.
We make the following new pre-mium offers:
1. To any old subscriber who will send us the name of a new sub-scriber and $'2, or f l . 5 0 if a minis-ter, we will send a copy of either of the following books: "The Minis-try of the Spirit ." by Dr. A. J. Gordon, "How Christ Came to Church," by Dr. A. J. Gordon; •'Beautiful Joe, " by Marshall Saun-d e r s ; " Pi igrlm s Progres s ." by J oh n Bunyan, ^'What Baptists Bel ieve ," by Dr. J L. Burrows; 'Remarkable Answers to Prayer. ' The two books by Dr. Gordon have been published since he died, but have had a wide sale. They are both exceedingly helpful and stimulating. "Beauti ful Joe" has had quite a run. Two hundred and tlfty thousand copies have already been sold. Of "Pll grlm's Progress, ' it is simply nec essary to say that it has had the largest sale of any book next to the Bible. The other bcoks also are well known and have been quite ptip-ular. All of these books are neat-ly bound in cloth, well printed, and would make a valuable addition to any library.
2. If the old subscriber wishes one of these books for himself, if he will renew his subscription and pay 12.15, or 11.65 if a minister, we will g ive him his choice of either one of them. Or if he will send $2.3f) he may have any two, or any three for $2.55, or any four for 12.75. If a minister, takeoff 50cents from these prices. These are remarkably low offers. Qultea number haveaiready taken advantage of them.
3. We are still offering Bagsujr 's Comprehensive Teachers' Bible, with flexible backs, gilt edges, and with maps, concordance,helps etc., together with a year s subscription to the BAPTIST ANI> REKI-ECTOK. for$H. This-applies either to an old or a new subscriber Wo have given away a great many of these Bibles as premiums in the last few months, and so far as we have heard they have given universal satisfaction. We hove recently received another large lot which are going rapidly.
4 To any old subscriber who will send us two new subscribers and $4, we will g ive a copy of the Bible, or a copy of Conybeare and How-son's Life and Epist les of Paul, or Smith's Bible Dictionary. All you have to do is to ge t the twt) now sub-scribers, and you secure either of these books without any cost to your-self.
K O F S L I N E cures coughs, colds and croup. Ask druggist for It.
JAMES T CAMP,
PRINTER & PUBLISHER. m N, College St.. NaabTllte, Tmn.
tiaialogues. Letterheads, NorthojKUi, BUI heads, Knrelofes, Wadding InvlUtlons, eta, In flrst-clau ityle at reasonable prloes. All Kinds of lemi blanks for Macintratrs and Motarles Publlr Postafff tiald. Wr«i> fnriM-•trrst**
8HOE8 A N D T R U N K S Boat oustom-made Shoes and a nice •eleotloD of T R U N K S can be had a lowest priooi. O. B. HORN ft CO., 200 Union atroet, near Market street.
K 0 F 9 L I N E onnM coughs, olds and croup. Awh il iigglKt fur It.
S u f f e i ' N o L o f l s e r l Brad II seals tgrnail (U ysui'
Ongglst doss not hasp ti),t«i' a Ban, lafs aad ralalsss •«•-ady for OenM, Wstts aad Baa-laas. HaPebsB. W«nraMt^ tmCmrwt lUwasethsn i . E i M n c i i u , M « n i M
raunooi, Ks.
T U O H B R A D O U O I i A S S , CARPETS, RUGS AND MATTINGS
Shades and Upholstering Goods N A N H [ V I L L . I f i , TIOIMIX 4 7 ' 0 U n i o n N t r o o t .
WHITE WASHING
rOR WHITE PEOPLE
M c E W E N ' S ^ ^ I ^ A U N D R V
[)KAI) I'MNISllED COIXAU9 AND (MJl'TH WILL NOT
CllACK ON THK KDOKH Tuleph...... M« Tolophon..
SAMPLES OF SILKS AND DRESS GOODS
NANilVILI.K, TK>> Timothy Dry Goods and Carpet Go. DRESS GOODS"
Black, All-wool SorgcM, 21t. M and 00c per yard^ All-wool Black Cheviots, 5(1, Oft and 78c -French Henrlottas. 40 Inches wide. 40 and 60 cents Finest Uenrleitas. 4« incho- wide, & 7f)C, formerly & i-i Black Mohairs, 50 lo TSc Black Crepons. (tOc to SI Silk warp OI^^CK DKK98 GOODS.
wm SILK BARGAINS • i All silk Black Hrwados , •!.25 qual i ty, at 75c. All-sllk Kxtra Heavy BUck Brocaden. •1.75 quall iy, at 91 i ' . All colorn In Changeable Taffeta Silk, <»5, 76 and 85c. Fancy Silks In liKht effects, »irl|Kie and checks. wen-Fancy TalTota Silk, for waists and drossos, 91 & 2.' I" "" var i Klegant line of BUck Satin Diicheas from 05 to • l . a i pcr yard
Wc can supply ANY KIND O F SILK ordered
^ COLORED DRESS GOODS * Forty-Inch, All-wool Flannels, a5c 54-ln.h, flne. ftOc All rolor» Fiftv-four-lnch Broadcloths, all colors and black. 75c. & S") Fancy Dress Goods for wrappers, p a n cotton, 12i and 15c Printed Fabrics, Canton Flannel back, 10c. Kleirant line of all-wool Dress Pat terns In Fancy^Styles $5 eaoh. French and German Novelty Dress Patterns. 10 50, 17.50 & »8 50. Trlramines, llntnfc'o and findings complete for each dress patUsrn. »2u>»2.:.' Oot>.l» ioni on orcJoPB can iK'returned at our expense If not entirely
satisfactory and money will lx< refunded. Wo try to tell you how well W! cai serve you; and if vou Uiil what you want and about the price you want t« •pay, wo can do buslne«» iilcaaantly Don't order a "Full line of naniplni. . f winter Dress Good«." Bather say: "I want samples of Fancy Drcsn (iooil!-(or black) at about 7,'ic per yard 1 prefer browns and ffarnets n a w i»ri (jreens, ' and you will irot them l>> roturn mall.
TIMOTHY DRY GOODS & CARPET GO. I s T j e L S H T V I X j H
Post Yourself About
Bicycles Read the new Columbia Catalogue. Hnndsomcst catalogue ever issued. Tells fully of Columbia and Hartford hli^ycles. Whether you buy the Columbia, the Miirtford or ,iny otiicr l)i< ycle, it will give you valuable and desirable information tiiat every cycliHt should know. Fully illf trated. Free by calling on any Columbia dealer; by mail from us for one 3-cent stamp.
^THHDHIIP OF THE WORLD
Bicycles TO NLL «LINB.
llartfonls,%<60,^50,'45 t "'
POPE MFG. GO. Hartford, Conn. Ofsslnt illcrcis irsclnry In Urn Wurld. Mora Ihsii
IT AcfW DI Floor 8p«e».
Branch Home or denier in nimott every dty and fnwn. It Ool-mnUu are tiorprotwHy repKianted In jrout vldnlty, l«t ui know.
T. J . MOONBY, Aifont, N M h t l l l e , Tenn.
B A P T I S T A N D R E F L E C T O R , M A R C H 2 6 , I 8 t f 7 . 1 5
Pcr«jn« you meet everyday,
WILL DIE OF BRIGHT'S DISEASE
or some trouble ol the kidneys, urmary >>r lemdie on;ani.
WHAT CAN BE DONE? In such a KHOUS condition you must
4.curc the best remedy you CAii find in the market
AT ONCE riieri; k oidy one .ibsolulely »u i
cure for thev. 'roublt:., and tkit is
I "It has stood the test of time." i
UHITIIAHV. NoTicB—Obituary ootlees not oioeedin* vCO
words will belntertsd free of obanre, biitoa* <»nt will be obarved foreaeb suooMdlnir word Had sbould be paid In ad vanos. Count the word snd rou will know eiaoilr »»i«« th" ebarge • III B*
(JiTTiiniE—Whereas, It has pleased ou r Ulvlne Master to remove by death our brother, I. N. Guthrie, who died a t his home near Gallat in, Teen , on l)co. 20. 180<). a t the ripe old a^e of 80. Uicrefore
Itemlml, Thai the members of this, Ills church, learn of his death with cU-ep reifrct. and by his death, the church lost a valuable member and a irue. firm Christian character.
UmAved, Tha t the sympathy of the . tuireh bo extended to the members of hU family In their (f'oat bereavement.
Utnoh'ed, Tha t a copy of these reso-lutions )M3 Klven U> his family, that ilicy lie spread upon the minutes of ihi! church, and that they bo published In I lie BAITIST A NO UKF'LKCTOB.
Uro. Guthrie wa« born in Franklin » ounty, Kentucky. In 1810; moved to Sumner County. Tennessee, In 1848; was a char ter memher of the Baptist church a t Gal la t in . Tenn.. which was <>rt;anlzod In 18,'>8; was a trustee of the c;hiiroh from its oriranlzatlon until his (loath. W . W . PAKUDK,
J . K. MILLKK, BKN CRAK),
Committee.
I
FAHMKII.—Again wo are called upon to lament the death of another brother. The news comos to us that Bro. D A. Farmer recently passed away. We deeply deplore what seems t'» us his untlmoly ond. Ho was In the full viBor of younsr manhood, and seemed des-tined to preach the Gospel for many years, yet il was the I^ord's will for iilin to qui t the walks of men. Ills eyes not {tormittini; hlro to study eon-ifnually, he was not in school, never-ihelcss ho was doing good wo'k in the ministry, succcedlng such men as hi-(ler T. H. Peti t ; therefore
Urmhad, By this Society that we ex-tend our sympathy to the stricken fam-ily and fr iends, and also hereby ex-press our own sorrow.
Itmlvtd, Also tha t a copy of those rcsolutloinB t)o spread on our minutes, a copy bo sent tho beroavod family, and a c o p y be s e n t tho BAITIBT AND UK-PLROTOR a n d BaptM Heaper f o r p u b Hcatlon.
^ R. IS. PBTTiaRBW, ^ M. M. Bl.aiI)80B,
W. B. HUNTRH, Oommiitee.
LYONB.—Tho doatta angel hafe again vtiitad ou r ohurob and town and iakon away two of on r raosl worthy mombors irom the home ot o\ir Mtaewod broth-er and denoon. J . B. Lvoni . Tho first call was fo r Olamnoo, tne liwond •on, agod 17. And was answerad on JanU' ary aotfi. Tho aooond cal l camo on
February Oth for tbe wlfo and mothe ' of the same home. Both diod in th( full assurance of faith. Words o sympathy and deeds of love were left in such profusion as to leave us no doubt as to their present state of rest. Therefore bo It
JlanAivd, That we yield with sub-missive trust to tho providence of God.
lieMlved, That wo extend to tho be-reaved family our slncerest sympathy, and bid them to realize
Thai tbsir loved ooes sre sone to rest ID the bi sutKul borne siiove,
Froo from sorrow snd slckoess UDd destb. And full of pcace and Joy and love.
llaoU'ed, That these relolutlons bo spread upon our minutes and a copy sent the BAITIST AND UEFLECTOUfor publication.
B. MOORE, C. 8. RU8SEI.L, V H. C. MUKCHIHON,
Committee.
I'liiLUi'H. -Whereas, our Father has seen Ot. by tho grim messenger ot death, to take from pur midst our young sister In Christ and Sunday-school scholar. Miss I ^ m a r Phillips, to that brighter land where no more parting tears shall dim our eyes, there-fore be it
lianlved. That In the life and charact-er of Lamar we recognize a faithful Sunday-school worker and an exemp-lary church memher. In her life we And much tn emulate and nothing to criticize As wo consigned her body to mother earth we commended her spirit to the Go'l who gave i t May we each one strive to live tho life Lamar lived, and bo received a wel-come guef t beneath our Savior ' s throne.
liaolvtd, That we as a church and Sunday-school extend our heart-felt sympathy to the bereaved family and friends, and point them to Him who doeth all things well. Can wo forget departed friends? Ah no!
Within our hearts their memory bur-ied lies;
The thought that whero they are wo, too, shall go
Will cast a light o 'er darkest scenes of wool
For to their own blest dwellings In tho skies,
Tho souls whom Christ sot free ex-ultlngly shall rise.
In behalf of the church and Sunday-school.
MRS.) S W. COFFEY, MRS. ) W. D. HAZELWOOD.
Committee. Consumption Cured.
An old physician, r«lred from pnwtlce. hav-ing bad piBcod In bis hands by an East lad a mlsslona ry tbe formula of a simple veceiable remedy for the speedy and.permanent cure of Consumption. Uronebltls, Catarrh. Asthma, and all throat and L>UDR AB»ctlouSj»lsoa pos-itive and radical cure for Nervous DeblUtyand all Nervous OomolalntH. "'wr hartn« ^ted Its wonderful euistTvs powers In thSisands of cases, has felt It h s outy to make It known to his suffering fellows. Aetuated by this motlee and a deslrS to relieve bunMO suBering. I will s nd free of charge, to who desl re 11, ttis recipe, In Ocrman. French or English, 'ttj" direct'" 'or preparing and using. Bent by mall by* "If with stamp, naming this pa-Ser W A Nofcs. »M) Powers Block, Roches Ur.N V^
Ede len ' sTrans fe fntorage Company, FAOKH. «T»K«« • M«VW»
BTBHTnUUT'S 0 0 0 0 8 II« TOWN Also alt kinds ot SAFES moved anywhere
Telephone 941. 88y Uffloe •ml Warehonse. a l l M I'oilege
Next to Wobb. Stevenson, Phllllpa * Co.
Don't fail to buy (from Goorgo Zlok. lor * C- . , ) v'Mi'- OWOOBRTWa W . J . J J O V L I N & S O IS 8 ,
(Successors to Paul * Doyllns.)
Printers and Publishers, will occupy space In this paper for tho next twolvo months. Thov oan save you money If you wish a oooj'. paper, magazine, ealaloguo. l»mpWet, triwt, o r any kind of oommerclal print-' " ^ho mombors of this Arm ure practi-cal printers, and with an entire now outflt of typo, proisoi and maohinory, thoy feel luBilfled In guarant ing lower priMS than fll••^ola•• work oan bo se-cured olsowhoro. Address 219 North Cherry streot, Nashville, Tenn.
— ?I5ED-When in want of pu ro f r e ih seed of any kind call on o r write w BAlUtY & H a w k w b , 145 N. Markel 8 t , Nashville. Tenn.
k O F 8 L I N E ' " " " ? o r F B
' ^ ^ l A S N U G F O R T U N E S HOW NE MADE IT.
Read His L e t t e r — ' ' forward the picture as required. Taking tn consideration books ordered in the name of C. H. Kobbins, General Agent, you oan safely say 10,000 volumes sold in three years steady work, deducting lost time. Of this number there has not l>een one volume sold except by my owti permwd (fforts. Tho amount I have saved from tho above work, considering Increaso In value of real estate, is worth today 110,000 It Is still moro grat ifying to know that four years of my life have been spent in a wav that will add to my Master 's cause. No one can read 'King of Glory ' without feeling nearer our Savior. Certainly there can be nooccup<Uion mtre hommhu than tho in-troduction of such literature. Perhaps no business has been moro abused by incompetent and ofi«n unscrupulous men than that of the canvasser. Vour friend In business and otherwise. W. C. HAURIS."
"King of Glory," A MOST
ChamiingLifeof Christ ' Is the book Mr. Harr i s is selling.
It has Just boon embellished with a largo numlwr of full page, half tone photographs of
Scenes in the Holy Land and of the life of Jesus. Very low price, beautifully bound, ex-ceedingly popular.
T H E O U T F I T will be sent, including full copy of book, with all necestary helps, for only 6 5 c e n t s . (S tamps taken.) Order at once and begin work. Address
University Press Company, 2 0 8 N . C o l l e g e S t . , N a s h v i l l e . T e n n .
The only Subscription Book Concern South of tbe Mason and Di*on Line owning its own Presses and Bindery.
T ^ R E ^ E T R I P
TO THE
Southern Baptist Convention AtWilmington.N.C, May 6-11,1897.
We take pride In offering free a ROUNH TIUP t i c k e t t o t h e S o u t h e r n
Baptist Convention which meets May 6, 1807, at Wllrolnjjton, N. C. Tho Importance of this great Con-vention cannot be overestimated and every Baptist who can should at-tend.
There are many who will go from T e n n e s s e e , a n d t h o BAITIHT ANI>
KKFMCCTon would like to see a lartfo representation there To secure t h i s i t p r o p o s e s t o K'VO vukv. TUII-«.
It has offered these before and thoy have been «Tcatly appreciated. Wc have arranRcd to KIVO round-trip t ickets from dllTeront points in the State. Those who raise c lubs will bo given t ickets fronn the railroad point nearest them.
For a club of IH new yearly sub Borlbers at 12 each a round trlp t icket will be g iven from Knoxvllle, Mossy Creek, Morrlsiown or Ath-ens.
For a clubof l.'> a round-trip ticket will be given from Cleveland, Day-ton, Chattanooga or Dalton, Ga.
For a club of Ifi a round-trip ticket will bo given from Decherd, Win-chester, Tullahoma or Wartrace.
For a club of 10 a round-trip ticket will be Kiven from Na.shvlllo. Mur-frccsboro, liCbanon, Springfield or Gallatin.
For a club of 24 a round-trip ticket will bo given from Paris, Erin, Hol-low Rock or Clarksvlllo.
For a club of 25 a round-trlptlckot will bo given from Trenton, Hum-l)oldt, McKenzle. Brownsvi l le , Jack-son or Union City.
Tho mention of these places Is not Intended to prevent anyone wher-ever you may l ive from working for tho trip. These places arc named, merely for convenience. Wo want 100 or more brelhren to take ad-vantage ot th is offer. Write for sample copies and begin at once.
AODnRStl Baptisf and Reflector, Nashville, Tenn.
y
1 6 B A P T I S T A N D R E F L E C r O K , M A R O H l i B , 1 8 9 7 .
E D U C A T I O N A L . -be utHidlDB School and Tewheri'nure»u ol i • tbe Bo^h and 8ouihw««t la tbo | I4 4 T I O N A I . B U n i C A U « r K D C O A T I O N |
J W malr.l'rop.,»ucoe««ortoMlMCro«thwall ind J T itlalr Wllcoi UuUdjng. Ntt bYllle. Tann Send »tanip tor lotormaHon
TEACHERS W A N T E D I
CABlko FIELD AND HOO FEII6& , win- Ftiiw Board I Yard.
Wo baveorer four'boUH.nd varancl.H Ur uch«.« eueh Mmca va oaoclea as mejnUew.. WV.uuHt hav« mo;.- li,;. cMnina K.ll T i. oi-nU.»livrr
:. rir/lalnlnil 'bBd tferem pUrw. Mor» < f
Cumberland Telephone &Telegraph Go General Office. ISO N. College S t . . Nashville. T^nn.
Connections with All Points East of the Mississippi River. S H j ' S I r i . ' ^ ^ ! ^ ' NaehvlUo RateB-ltesldenccs. 12 50 per .no^ and up. a c c r d l n ^ U, service •I\e8iuencc». IK' pu' " f ,
Bu»lnc88. W r)0 per mo. and up acctirdJnir to Borvleo Both Kub.'ecl to dUcountof fit)c per month
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PRINTING? I P s o , CALL ON OH ADDIIK-^-.
w. A. T. KRAMEII. BOOK AND J O B PRINTEU
661 N Cherry St . . NMh»lll»i. T.-m,
UrIUIW cgfeXfaWj^Ar^fc l ^ Q P ^ ^ I l ^ ^ rllr«.flnuBl.. »„, carta oouchv. coia-
and croup Ai.k drugfl U for It
K O F F L I N E URESJOFFS.
Oak Lawn Poultry Yards. - The home of the l. 'ght Bra M A m a h . Brown U g h o r n . Buff A J P Cochin. White Pl jmouth ^ ^ RocWs. Bronze Turkey, and vftfefi? Duel, Birds and efg» (or sale. Circular free. „ „
MRS. S. U WILSON Mouse Croelt, Tenn.
Buckeye Bell Foundr
KOFS^LINE KURES
KOFFS. H b e l X S 6t»l Alloy Charth »Bd ^hoc! W ^ d f W C»imioeii«. a . B K I X A e o „ H U l i a a r a .
i O ^ O O O A G E N T S W A N T E D ( N o e x p o r l o n c c n q u l r c d ) T o s i m p W t h e ^
i n K d o r a u n d f o r t h a t W o n d e r f u l H o o k . T O U C H I N G I N C I D E N T S a n d I I E 3 I A K K A B L E 4 A ' 8 W E I t 8 T O P R A Y E R a n d llio C l I I L D R E N ' S E D I T I O N O F T H E S A M E . D u r i n g t h o t h r o e y e a r s t h o s e ^ k s h a v e b e e n c i r cu l a toU .
lA QUARTER MILLION IllAVE BEEN S O L D O R GIVEN A W A Y . T h e s e b o o k s a . . . L«l lhi>r f a s t e r a n d do inK m o r e p o o d t h a n a n v o t h e r r e l i g i o u s b o o U on I t h e m a r k e t . T h e C h i l d r e n ' s E d U i o n h a s 1 2 8 j r i a f r e s f u l l y i l l u s tml . - . I w i t h 4*4 l a r g e n e w cut®, s i ze 0 x 8 l n c h c £ . P r i c e in h e a v y d
C l o t h , b o c t s . M o r o c c o . »1 .<M» L a r g o E d i t i o n . V l o t h , a a o p a p e s , p r i c e , » 1 . 0 0 . M o r o c c o , ^ l . i i O .
S Thin rat ODo-thlrtl actual alia- * ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ B a i m /
AGENTS ARE MAKING FROM $20.00 TO $30.00 P E R WEEK. Ilitl..dlff..r«.n™ wh.-th.-r you have had cipcrlanco tt» an ugcut or not. fairly pr«ont«l. t h e s e bOOkS Will s e l l tnamseiVSS-
Mlchlcan ChrlatlM Advocatai 'iTheJantfr J»aue «f thj« Tha Cnlon .Signal. orKan of tho W. 0 T. I : ; ' ' . i ^ " l J oelther doctrinal nor denominational, yet UUtlnotly CjirUtUn. lis SfJh "llRloui ton", t u f»»cloatlnK uplrlt an.l tho lilgb ratik of lu wntribatoM make U a strong faith tonic auU an lnai,lratlon to pro-'alllns prayer •
ha. been wld.1, circulated and read. Thla cheauer wil t lo^ trated) contain, aurh iwlcctlou. aa ara c a l c d l a ^ to Interct and Instruct clUldren. The IncldenU are »ery pathetic." Iiyiuuiuia — Instruct citjiaren. iub inciuBUMi
< > A •• W A T C H •• R R B B I < > ..THE BAPTIST AND REFLECTOR..
Is going to enter on this Centennial year of Tennessee B-iptist history with a dt-terniinod effort to increase its useful-ness for the Master, by giving to its people the hcst religi«»us paper issued in America.
It contemplates many things of helpfulness to the Cau?e. m m m m m m m m m m n m ? m m m m m m m m m m m m f ! M i i n ! i n f ! i f ! i t f ? ! ! ? m m m m m m m m m m m m
rS circulation has continued to grow but it is not what the Cause merits it should be. It feels that it should
[ put forth every legitimate means pos-sible to increase its circulation. We want 10 or 15,000 subscribers. There are many faithful workers who are giving their labors to the paper for the love of the Cause. We have decided to offer a useful, while not a gaudy or extravagant Premium to all, and for such a small number of subscribers, that any preacher or layman, boy or girl, can secure it. To this end we have made arrangements to give a BEAUTIFUL WATCH FREE FOR ONLY SEV/iN NEW YEARLY SUBSCRIBERS.
ME WATCH is 14-carat Gold. ^ ^ liUed. It is Hunting Case. It is
Seven-jewel, (food movement. Stem Wind, Stem Set. Dust Proof. It is a good timepiece. It is guaranteed just as represented. You can have choice of either LADIES' or GEN-TIJCMEN S Size. Almost an indis-pensable necessity to every one, is a Watch. You can secure this by a few hours work. Write at once for Sample copies of the paper and Sub-scription Blanks. This offer will be made to extend to a limited time. ACT A T ONCE. A BEAUTIFUL WATCH F R E E FOR ONLY SEVEN NEW YEARLY SUBSCRIBERS. It will pay you.
i u iu iumiu iu iu iu iu iumiu iamimuuiu i iuu i i i a t iu iu iu i iu ima i i iu i i i i i u i i i i u As the Official Organ of the State Convention and its Boards it will cobtinue to contain many things of interest to
the whole State, and the great Baptist hosts of the world.
- A d d r e s s : B A P T I S T A N D R E F L E C T O R , N A S H V I L L E . T E N N . - ,
CURRENT TOPICS
- T h e high watoreof tho M I D B U B I P P I
lllver Btlll continue. All of lho»niall-,r rlvera, auch aa tbo Cumberland, iho TonnoBBCO, etc., have protty well HubBlded, but thiB only moan, that all iho water which ha* Rono ihrouifh them must also go Into the MUaUslppl I.) nwcll the tremendous Hood there. I lirough a spU'.ndld «>8U;m of levccB Hloutf the banlcB of the lower M I B B I B S -
ippl, built by the government, Iho waters of the rivers are being conllned within its banks for the most part. In some places, however, these levees have broken and the result has been devas-latlon and death. Wo ho|)o that the worst Is over; though we (ear tho re-oent rains may only add to the horrors of the llood. It Is said that AshjK.rt, Tenn.. has been swept away by the flood and Golddust. Toen., has been render-CM! uninhabitable by It. i 'eople along the levees of the Ml.sUslppl are bat-tling heroically for their homes and iholr lives. Irrespecllvoof occupation or of color, U>ey are standing upon the leveos and watching fo r tbo least sign of » b r e a k In them ao a t to repair the damage before It can grow beyond control.
—Tho il tuatlon In the Kast remains practically unchanged. Greece Is stil l determined that Of etc shall be annexed to her as theonly solution of tho piob-1cm. and the Cr t t ans - a t least tho cnr ls t lan portion of tho population, which Is the largo ma jo r i t y - s t i l l con-tinue also anxious for annexation wlUi Grecee and refute to accept tho autonomy offered by the Powers, even with a Grcclan IVlnce as ruler. The blockade of the Cretan ports by the Powem has boon effectual so far as keeping anyone from going out or In. but U has not had the desired elTect of putting an end to tho war, as tho In-surgent forecs on tho Island refuse to surrender, oven with starvation star-ing Ihom In tho face. They say they would rather die lighting for their in dcpendoneo than to be killed by the Turka like tho Armenians. A recent correspondent, wrl t lngfrom the Island, saya: " K v e r y whore enthusiasm, unani-mity and determination wore displayed, and a s the Cretans a re lnl«lllgent, ob-sllnato, fearless and fanatical, It Is dlllloult to understand . by what pro-cess known to admirals , generals or dlplomatlBU autonomy can bo Imposed upon t h e m against their own will.' In the laoo of the dotormlned stand by Q r ^ and Crete, tho concert of tho I'ow-orBicemsgo lng top lccoH. Andespeo l a l -
I j U this t rue In England, Franco and I taly, Ihu people of which countries, » • we •latod tovofa l weeks ago, are disposed to sympalhlzo with the On-Una in Iholr atruggle for liberty. Mr. Glftditono's letter, also, of which wo m a d e mont lonlai t week, ha> had a tro-mendouR .ffeck both In formulating and In lormlng public sentiment In those
^ oounkrlM, part icularly In * W h a t will bo tho roiull of iho whole
mattor nobody now can toll. -C ton . Maximo GomeE, the Cuban
General, aondB an open Uitor to Pre i -Ident MoKlnloy, a copy of which M
says wa8 also sent to President Cleve-land dated February 9th, In which he makes an earnest and heart-rending ap|>eal to President McKlnley to In-iwrfore In Cuban alTalrs In the Interest of humanity. In It he says; " I will not siMjak of tho Cubans In arms. No; 1 raise my volco only In the name of unarjied Americans, victims of a (rlghlful cruelty. I raise It In the name of weakness and of Innocence Bacrltlced with forgetfulness of the elementary prlnclplott of humanity and tho eternal maxim, of Christian mor-ality—sacrlQced brutally in the closing days of the nineteenth century, at the very gate* of the nation which sUnds so high In modern culture; sacrificed there by a decaying European mon-archy which has the sad glory of set-ting forth ths horrors of the middle ages . " Speaking of the conduct of the Spaniards In the war, he says; " i t Is logical that such should be the conduct of the nation that expelled the Jews and the Moors; that Instituted and built up the terrible Inquisition; that established the t r ibunals of blood In the Netherlands; that annihilated the Indians and oxtericlnated the first settlors of Cuba; tha t assassinated thousands of her subjects In the wars of South American Independence, and that niled the cup of Iniquity In the last war In Cuba ." After a long ar-raignment of the Spaniards he adds: "Ought such facts to be tolerated by a clvlll/ed people? Can human powers, forgetting tho fundamental principles of Christian uommiinlty. permit these things to go on? Is It possible that clvlll/ed people will consent to the sacrifice of unarmed and defenseless men? Can the American people view with culpable Indifference the slow, but complete, extermination of thou-sands of innocent Americans? No, you have declared that they cannot; that such acte of barbari ty ought not to bo permitted nor tolerated." Ho closes with these words: "Crown your hon-orable history of statesmanship with a notable act of Christian charity. Say to Spain that murder must stop, that cruelty must coase, and put the stamp of authority on what you say. Thou-sands of hearts will call down eternal benedictions on your memory and God, tho supremely merciful, will see It In the most meritorious work of your entire llfotlmo " Wo publish these extracts from the letter of Gen. Gomez bccauscthey a re more eloquent In their apiwals for sympathy for down trodden Cuba than anything which wo could write. I t does soem to be a disgrace to our clvlll/.atlon that wo should allow such acts of barba-rism periietrated a t our very doors. It Is quite a blow to tho Cuban cause that on March 27th Gen. Ruls Rivera, tho successor to Gen. Antonio Maceo, was capturod In & battle with tho Span-lards after having been wounded throo timoa by Ihom. Tho S p a n i a r d ! aro rojololng groatly ovor bU oapturo. As waatheoaw, howovor, when M ^ was killed, l o wo aro suro It will bo now; •omo one olso will a r l io to talra Don. Rivera 's place. Tho causo U mot* than any man.
HV W, C. MAUTIH
What ttaoucb lay plUrlmaga «)e ov»r Barren deserts day by day.
What tbougb before me seem such trial. A. mlgtat UU witb blank dismay.
Tbe blessed Holy Spirit leads me By the right way.
What though the road be hard and by It Df moos crouch like bea»u of prey;
What though the way be dark and dreary. Skies DO guiding sur dl.play i
1 kDOW mj heavenly rather leadeth By the right way.
O, Father, from the paU thou markest I would never, never stray.
Whatever be thy marchlog order.: I would never dlMbey,
f), God, I trust aod know thou leadest BytheclRht way
Noank. Coon.
Making The Most of ThlngB.
nv PBOr w. OABDES BLAIKIB. D D . LUU. Author ot the "Life of Llviogslone." etc
The ar t of making the most of things has an important bearing on success In life; a p d - w h a t ought to be the same thing, al though In men's Idea it Is often d l f lo ren t -on enabling us to fulfill tho groat purpow o ! life. A wise economy of resources, mental and material; a happy a r t of turning them to the best account; a quick fertility of device to using the materials within reach for the accomplishment of any given object, gives a man extra;ordl-nary value In the world, and, when his energies are directed to worthy ends, makes him great In the sight of God. The best life Is tho life of him who, In the largest sense, has made the most of everything. He who has wasted least of what God has given him, and Improved most; who h a i In-creased his talents by the greatest multiple, and has the largest amount to present to his Lord when he comcs to take account of his stewardship, Is the man who h a t lived to most purposf' and, though ho may havo dlod wlthou a shilling, ho has really accumula - ' tho greatest fortune.
There Is no such thing as waste/ In Nature; Invariably tho most Is made of everything, lavish and prodigal though Nature often seems. There Is no waste, for example. In the human body; of nothing there could It bo said that there Is no more use for It than a oMt has for a third wheel. No one of Us two hundred and fifty-four tones, and of Its still larger number of mus-cles. could bo dlsponiod with without Inconvenience and loss. W h a t a won-derful muUwn in panv Is tho healthy human body. What a variety ol pur-poses aro ofton served by a single contrivance, and these purposes so dlsslmilarl Tho eye, for oxamplo, U a toloscopo and mlorosoOpo In ono; It Is, moreover, ono of tho chlof o rnamenu of tho faoo, a-ad a t the same timo ono ol tho principal organs of Intolloctual and moral expression. It sparkles with Intolllgonoo, fiashos with Indignation, kindles with hopo, melts with grlol, trombles with pity, Ungtilsh-e i with lovf, twinkles with humor, sUr t s with amasement, o r shrinks with horror , acooruing to tho Impulso given
to It from the soul within. It Is a whole alphabet of signs, a complete gamut of tones; each of which It ex-prosses by a modification of Its parts so slight that none but the mo. t skill-ful painters are able to reproduce them on the canvas.
The windpipe, In like manner, Is a strange combination of a chimney and a musical Instrument; and strange to say, It Is while doing the work of the chimney that It creates the beauty of musical sounds. Not only Is the foul a i r from our lungs expelled through the windpipe, like the smoke of a fac-tory through Its long chimney; but It Is In the course, and In the act of Its expulsion, that it gives birth to artlc-ulato speech and to musical sounds. The finest notes of tbe greatest singers or of the veritable nightingale itself, are produced by the discharge of used-up a i r through the chimney of the sys-tem, turned into music by an a r t which mocks the feeble performance of the famous Memnon.
Let UB observe, too, what a wonder-ful thing the human voice is, depend-ent though It be on the byplay of or-gans most of which In their direct ac-Uorf havo another use. If i t be t rue of tbe eye that it can lie adapted to the expression of such a variety of moods and feelings, how much vaster in this rcspect Is the capacity of the voice! What endless diversities of sound, and not of bfoad sounds only, but of delicate shades and varieties of sound, it is capable of expressing! W h a t mysterious blending it under-goes with all varieties of human feel-ing, coming out differently In every case according to the emotion to which for tho moment It Is married! What a triumph It would be If, in regulating the discharge of tho air employed in factories, man should over como to Imitate Nature, and teach his long ijhlmneys to discharge thoir contents amid sounds sweet and silvery as the chimes of ContlnenUl church spires!
In Nature, too, wo constantly find tha t whenever an object turns useless for ono iierson, It becomes useful for another. The-sailor who boasted that In tho course of his adventures ho had on one occasion come to tho end of the world, and on climbing to tbo top of the boundary wall, had looked over it, and ecen a great heap of old moons lying a t tho bottom, would have given a very different turn to his Imlglnatlon If he had known anything of tho econ-omy of Nature. That very substance of which wo have b^en speaking, tho used-up air expelled from our lungs, commonly called carbonic acld-gas, has no sooner become usoless for ani-mals than It becomes useful for vege-tables. It Is as unwilling lo admit Its mission a t an end as tho dovlls In tho Gospel, oxpollod from tbo maniac, when they begged to bo allowed to entor tho herd of swlno; but, unllko thrso omlssarlos ol ovil, Its ambition Is to continue a career of usefulness. Having served Us purpose in tho hu-man frame, the air proceeds to lulfl l a similar ond In tho vegotablo world; having gUen Its oxygon to tho ono, It glvos Its carbon to tho other. And
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