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\S C108)
D ORGANS
*n"J
t"arw>, ?v?mt ion*. 8ap?lor uiulU
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S. H. Hawes & Co.
??l*n b
COAL
Lime, Plaster, Cement
BfCHMOHD, T4.
WH
When traYeling between >orfolk.
Richmond, Lynchburg, Cincinnati, Louisville,
Chicago, St. Louis and the West
and Southwest generally, yon will And
the CHESAPEAKE A OHIO up-to-date
In eTery particular.
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C. A 0. Ry. Richmond, Ta.
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RICHMOND, VA.' I
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W. H. PALMIER, President,
8. B. ADDISON, Vice President,
W. H. MCCARTHY, Secretary,
OSCAR D. PITTS, Treasurer.
TRANflFER MON1Y
TRANSFER MONEY [
! to
L0K6 DISTANCE TELEPHONE
OTor Rates Apply to Laoal Mui|tr.
Ouoibestaad Telephone A Telegrnpk
Company, Im?.
NSW ORLEANS. LA
SOUTHERN RAILWAY
PREMIER CARRIER OF THE SOUTH.
Tralna Leave lllrhmoud.
N. B.?Following: schedule flgurM published
as Information and not ruaran(?n(l.
6:10 A.M. Daily Local for D&nvltla,
Charlotte, Durham and Ralelgrh.
10:46 A.M. Dally Limited For all points
South. Drawing Room. BulTet.
Sleeping Car to Aahevllle.
8:00 P. M.?ax. Sunday?Local for Durham,
Raleigh and Intermediate atations.
6:00 P.M. Dally For Danville, Atlanta
and Birmingham, with through
electric lighted drawing room
sleeping car.
11:46 P.M. pally Limited for all points
South.' Pullman ready 0:00 P.M.
York River Line.
4:30 P.M. Dally. To West. Pt., connecting
for Baltimore Mon., Wed
and Frl.
0:00 A.M. Ex. Sun. and 2:16 P.M. Mon..
Wed. and Frl. Local to West Pt
Trains Arrive In Richmond.
From the South: 6:60 A. M.. 8:40 A. M..
2:00 P. M? 8:05 P. M... dally, and 12:56
P. M., ex. Hun.
From West Point: 0:80 A. M., dally:
11:81 A M.. Mon.'. Wed. and Frl : 4:26
P. M., Fx. Sun.
fl R BtmORSS. D. P A
Ml * Main St. 'Phone Madison 2TS
a - .wbh!
THE PRESBYTERIi
1 JSAND OF MEN WITH GODTOUCHED
HEARTS.
(A synthetic story of ths Chattanooga
Convention that woa for Missions one
hundred dollars.)
1 Sam. 10:26: . . . and there went
with him a band of men, whose hearts
God had touched."
When the children of Israel Indicated
their desire for a change in the form of
government from a theocracy to a
monarchy, God acceded to their wishes.
He himself selected for them a king.
Samuel had already anointed the one
chosen; and the calling of the tribes
together at Mlzpeh was for the pur.
pose of making formal proclamation of
Cnnl 9 a lHnrroRiM
?juui a aiugouip,
God has chosen his own Son to "reign
over" the hearts of "the children of
men." He is the Annointed One. The
gathering together of the Southern
Presbyterian hosts in Chattanooga was
for the purpose of proclaiming anew
their allegiance to his government.
The opening address proper of the
convention was delivered by Dr. R. E.
Vinson, who, using as a motto text the
words of the "angel of God" to Paul the
great apostle to the.Gentiles, "whose 1
am," declared and expounded the doctrine
of the lordship of Jesus Christ:
and expressed the hope that it might
uc lliauu iuc IVCJ-UUIC Ui wUC tUUTCUUUll.
This hope was so marvellously realized
that "there went" with Christ, the
freshly proclaimed King, to his home in
every part of the Southland, "a band of
men, whose hearts God had touched."
What were Borne of the features of
this proclamation which combined to
produce this efTect?
I. The sight of the numbers present,
uniting in the proclamation. It was
Jehovah who, through the prophet
Samuel, "called the people together unto
the Lord to Mizpeh." It was just as
truly the Holy Spirit, who, through the
leadership of the Church, and especially
through Mr. Rowland, a man of God
with far-sighted vision "called the people
together unto the Lord" in Chatta
uuukci. /\nu uey feciLiiui tju at mat BUUIraonfl
from all parts of the Church, more
than 1,500 strong (there were 1,535
registered delegates, Including ministers,
students and missionaries). The
sight of the assembling of these hundreds,
all actuated by a common motive
of love, and uniting in a common purpose
of service, was sufficient in Itself
to touch the hearts of all who witnessed
it, inspiring with new hope the most
dispirited, infusing new strength Into
the most weary, and girding with new
resolution the most aimless.
I?. The personnel of the convention;
especially of Its lenders.
They are they who are turning the
world upside down.
Among the ministers might be mentioned
Vance, Chairman of the Assembly's
Executive Committee of Foreign
Missions, author, orator, beloved pastor
of old First, Nashville; Vinson, the
young and handsome educational missionary
of Texas; Dobyns, the Church's
example of strenuous and successful
pastoral leadership in missions; Fllnn,
of Atlanta, active, devoted, spiritual,
evangelist'c missionary pastor; D. Clay
L.illy, attractive speaker, effective organizer,
gifted presiding officer; Chester,
Senior Secretary, with business efficiency,
diplomatic tactician, who has
fa'thfully and devotedly borne the burdens
of the office for seventeen years,
witnessing the growth of the work to
nearly three times the size it was when
he took charge of it; Febert W. Smith,
new Secretary, dignifed. learned, en.
t.huslastlc pleader; H. F. Williams, help
fill entbor, beloved editor, encyclopaedically
Informing lecturer: and a boat
of otbera too nnmaroua to mention,
whoa* namea a?*e dear and whose work*
are known. Among: the more prominent
of the laymen present, and taklnr
?
\ N OP THE SOUTH
part, mar be mentioned tba following:
Prof. Henderson, tba witty, broad-mlndad.
conaacratad leader of tba boats or
Baptist laymen; Jobn R. Pepper, the
great Sunday school man of Memphis,
and progressive chairman of the Southern
Methodist Laymen; Rowland, short
in stature, long in vision, small in body,
large in brain and heart, of whom it is
said that he is doing more than any
other man in the Southern Presbyterian
Church for missions; J. Cambell White,
the head and front of the Laymen's Missionary
Movement, master of assemblies;
Robert E. Speer, the greatest of
tnem all, ex-Princenton athlete and
student, Btrong in body, deep in intellect,
broad in culture, lovely in character,
with a face for benevolence like
the face of a great Newfoundland dog,
with the voice of a lion, naturally harsh,
but which grows wondrous sweet as he
pleads the Master's cause, everywhere
in demand as a speaker before student
bodies, traveler, author, humble follower
of the "meek and lowly Nazarene."
A goodly number of the "elect" ladles
of the church were present, representing
that vast host of women who have
so abundantly prayed and labored and
sacrificed for the cause; these lent
grace and tenderness, while the men
brought strength to the convention; in
the gallery of the convention hall they
sat "silent and happy" as they looked
down upon the men at work.
Among the missionaries from the
front, who added inspiration to the convention,
four had part on the program:
B. C. Patterson, whose heart has been
touched with the sadness of the sights
THE SALVE THAT
KREITZER
FOR CORNS, BOILS, BIT]
IVY POISON, FR
HAVE Yi
Kreltzer'a Antldyspeptlc Pills for regula
Remedy; Gargle for Sore Throat; Grav
these are highly recommended by physlcl
W. C. POWER A CO., Mfgra^ 153? N
More and Be
If you want to secure big, mon
have the best fertilizers?carefully
should have for all of your other cr<
If you want to secure a big cro
VirginiaHigh-1
Fertil
They are made with an exact
of the plant. They contain the I
plant. Before setting out the pi:
worked into the soil. Follow this I
Carolina Fertilizers, or Top Dresser
growing period, thus giving new str
if your planting, fertilizing, cultiva
been careful and thorough, you shoi
Our free 1912 YEAR BOOK c<
to tobacco planters and other farmc
SALES OFFICES
Richmond, Va. Charleston, S. C.
Norfolk, Va. Baltimore, Md.
Atlanta, Ga. Columbus, Ga.
L O _ m " -
imtoiuiw, via. Montgomery, Ala.
Columbia, S. C. Memphis, Tenn.
Durham, N. C. Shreveport, La.
Alexandria, Va. Winston-Salem, N. C.
( ROCHE'S HERBAL I
BP TTTHT
LJLJLmLLk
Th? CflrlirnlH fr.ftocttaM Iloi
* or 190 years tiiu ltemrdy has met *
1QRONCHITI8, LUMBAI
ar? al?o QnVkly Relieve
I *f. Kdwnrda A '#?, 1R7 Queen Victoria St.,
g l?ndun, Knglitnd.
[ February 28, 1912
in tb# ?*mlu# district of China, and who
baa felt somethings of th# joys of ministering
to tbss# starving millions; W.
H. Hudson, whose residence and labors
in China for sixteen years enable blm
to speak clearly and forcefully of the
opportunity presented by the present
situation there; Preston, one of the
four originators of the Forward Movement,
and among the younger workers
and leaders in Korea; and Mott Martin,
who, on account of the sacrifices he
had to make in his decision for Christ
and the ministry, the providential
preservation, as If by a miracle of his
life, when the "Samuel N. Lapsley" was
nvorhiruofl 1 rv tbo vvotnra n f fho Pnntrn
v.v.iu.uvu 1U VWW Wl
River, and the remarkable successful
evangelistic tourB he has made In the
country round about Luebo, Is probably
the most Interesting of all the mission- '
arles on the field, a man who is "burn.
ing out for God" in Africa.
III. The felt presence of Christ.
When Saul was brought from his hiding
place "among the stuff," he stood
"higher than any of the people from >
his shoulders and upward. And Samuel
said to all the people, See ye him whom
the Lord hath chosen, that there is none
like him among all the people?"
Time and again was Christ brought
forward in the convention, and shown
in all the beauty of his character; and
everytime he appeared as "the chiefest
among ten thousand," the One who Is
surpassingly lovely. But at no time
probably during the convention was this
so admirably done than In the presentation
of him by Speer in his address on
"Life and Leadership," when he told
I I A *""? r-/M I A I
nrtD INU C_WLJ/AL_
' S SAL VP
INS, CARIIUNCLRS, SORF.S, JL^i
ESH WOUNDS, Kto.
DU TRIED
ting the liver; Rheumatic and Neuralgia
el Tea for Kidneys; Pile Ointment. All
ans. Ask your druggist for them,
orth Fourth Street, Philadelphia, Pa.
stter Tobacco
ey-paying tobacco crops, you must
and liberally applied?just as you
>ps.
p of the finest leaf, use
Carolina
Grade
i7o?*e
A*JVI o*
knowledge of the food requirements
rind of food that agrees with the
ants a generous supply should be
>y frequent applications of Virginiato
nourish the plant through the
ength and life to the plants. Then,
.ting, cutting and curing is or has
jld get a big-money crop,
antains information that is valuable
:rs. Write for one.
EMBR0CATIOiM*O^^^l
...dy CROUP
'Ith continued and growing popolarity.
CO and RHEUMATI8M
id by a Few Application*. ^
#