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16
of the boy. Finally, he began to feel
the throbbing of his conscience. He
said, “That is not right, and yet it
would bring the freedom of my boy,”
and all that night he lay upon his bed
thinking, and his love for that boy was
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tugging away upon his heart-strings.
Next morning he got up and said, “I
am going to the penitentiary and see
my boy, and tell him about it.” He
went. After some conversation with
the boy, he said, “Father, what is the
matter with you? You seem to have
aged since I saw you last.” Said the
old man, “My boy, I have come to talk
a matter over with you. I can get
your freedom for my vote against pro
hibition. What have you to say about
it?” I wonder how many men in this
house could stand a test like that?
That boy stood for a moment and
quivered and trembled, and then, amid
tears, he looked into his father’s face
and said, “Father, I would not be a
party in causing you to violate your
conscience like that for my life. It is
whiskey that put me here. Go back
to the halls of legislature and register
your vote against it.” That old man
went back, and the next day the vote
came; and he arose, and there were
men that watched him as he stood and
quivered like an aspen leaf, and when
it came to a vote for or against pro
hibition, his vote was, “Yea.” Talk
about self-sacrifice! We know no
sacrifice until w r e have something like
that.
My final word is this: there is noth
ing that promises reward like courage.
I see Stephen tonight stoned to death
because he had courage to stand up
and preach the gospel. I can see him
as they began to throw the stones at
him, and the cloud passed away, and
the heavens opened, and he saw One
seated at the right hand of God like
unto the Son of man. After that vis
ion I fancy every stone that came
from the enemy's hand was like a love
kiss from his Lord. It paid in the end.
And I can not help thinking about the
early fathers of ours in the early
colonial days in this country; how
they dared to preach the Gospel ac
cording to their conscience, and how
it paid in the end, when they saw the
constitution of this great American re
public with religious liberty as the
strongest plank in it. I can not help
thinking of you, my brethren, and
these sacrifices which you have made,
and how many of you have suffered
hardness and criticism, sometimes
ostracism, the loss of friends, and
financial suffering; but, oh, God bless
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Rev. Lon G. Broughton, D.D. .
Care Baptist Tabernacle ATLANTA, GA.
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The Golden Age for April 6, 1911.
you! we have begun to see the clouds
pass, and the day will come when you
will, like Stephen, see One seated
upon the right hand of God. Then
you will see the fruit of your sacri
fice. Some may have before that
time gone to their reward, but their
work goes on, for the kind of practical
Gospel we have preached is bound to
live.
In Texas, many years ago, there
was a war raging between Texas and
Mexico. On the Mexican side was
General Santa Anna, a brute, and on
the Texas side was General Travis, a
great statesman and soldier. Finally
there came a time when Fort Alamo
was to be besieged, and when, if the
Texans were defeated, it meant the
surrender of their State. Everything
depended upon the holding, on the
part of Texas, of Fort Alamo. Gen
eral Travis was in charge, and ahead
of him was a larger army than his
own, and he was nervous about his
men. There had come to him whispers
about cowardice, and he did not know
how to count on them. The day be
fore the battle he called his men to
gether and outlined to them the na
ture of the fight, and the probable suf
fering that would come from such a
struggle. He informed them of the
probable loss of life, of the butchery
and the savagery should they be cap
tured; he held up to them the picture
of the hardness of the struggle; then
he drew a long line; then said he,
“Men, I want every man willing to
suffer hardness, those who are willing
to risk life, to come over on this side
of that mark with me, for I am willing
to die with you.” What do you think
they did? Every man of them filed
across that line and took their stand
around the general except one. There
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he lay on his side; he could not turn;
he could not arise; he had been
wounded in both legs, and he was cry
ing, “General, I can’t move, but I want
to come over there. I can’t fight, but
I can shoot.” The general crossed the
line, picked him up like a baby and
carried him back across the line and
placed him in the center of the crowd.
What was the result? Victory; and
it was not a hard task. Alamo was
preserved and Texas was free.
My closing words to you, my own
people, are these: I feel I need hardly
say it, for I have tested you in days
when men’s souls have been tried, but
I want to say to you there is fighting
yet ahead; there are perils yet to en
counter; there are conquests yet to be
made in behalf of God and righteous
ness and downtrodden humanity, and
I say to you, friends and members of
this church, as you face these strug
gles, take your stand together along
the line. If you are not able to fight,
in the name of God, shout; and thus,
if we stand for God and for needy
humanity in every walk of life, among
every class of people, when the battle
is ended and the smoke is cleared
away, He will show us the result of
our warfare, and we shall be satisfied.
R
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One cup of molasses, one cup of
brown sugar, one cup of shortening,
two eggs, two teaspoonfuls of soda,
three cups of flour, two cups of dried
apples before being soaked. Beat and
stir in one egg and add raisins and
spices to suit. Soak the apples over
night. In the morning put in molasses
Toe the mark; but, when you are
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