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Babies are always happy
when comfortable. They
are comfortable when well.
They are apt to be well when
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Q SELECTIONS FOR WOMEN'S VOICES]
160 pp. Choice Muelc. jl.oo postpaid.
f/T\" NEW MUSICAL CURRICULUM
\ \) Leading Piano Instructor. $2.?5 postpaid.
<~can'you>
Q CHILDREN Os THE YEAR
For Children’s Day. 5 cts. postpaid.
Z/K POPULAR COLLEGE SON6S
|\ 1/ 130 pp. Latest and Best Songs, - 50c. postp.
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\ V/for Analyzing Music, etc, $2.00 pos tpal d.
THE LINES?
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[A] Cincinnati. New York.
Al Root & Sons Music Co., Chicago,
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SPURGEON’S
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WgL, Including Memorial Ser-
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F7 V ‘ W WORLD’S
Greatest Preacher.
By Rev. R. B. Cook, D.D.
IjMMMWWIHBMiywaW Over 500 pages,
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THE FAMILY FRIEND, Norfolk. Ya.
CONSUMPTION.
I have a positive remedy for ths nbovs dlreua; by It.
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©bitnariccr*
COX.—The angel of death has en
tered the home of Bro. Fred P. €?x,
May 3rd 1892 and* bore therefrom
one of the brightest jewels of that
home, in the person of dear little
Sanford. He was born Jan. 26th
1887 being only five years three
months and one week old—a short
life, indeed, but long enough to fill
with love the inmost recesses of the
hearts of those who knew him. lie
was a victim of that fearful disease
—muscular rheumatism and had
passed hardly a week of intense suf
fering ere God took him unto Him
self.
We miss him sorely, for his child
ish prattle was heard till early morn
to evening’s close. May God cheer
the hearts of the grief stricken par
ents. Aunt Lizzie.
COOK.—Dr. Philip Cook died at
his home in Marshallville Macon
county, Ga., April 13th 1892 having
been born and raised in the afore
said county. Death claimed him in
the prime of his young manhood.
He possessed many sterling attributes
of character that stamped him as one
of natures noblemen.
While his every day life was not
as thoroughly characterized by un
aggressive zeal yet he possessed many
Christian graces. The deceased was
for years, and at the time of his
death, a member of the church. He
believed in a practical Christianity
which impelled him to endeavor to
alleviate the want and misery of his
fellow creatures. His heait was
honest and full of tender charity for
the poor and needy. He stood high
in his profession and embraced every
opportunity afforded him to render
valuable and unremunerated assis
tance to indigent families. The
writer knew him from early child
hood and up to mature manhood and
can richly testify to the upright hon
est character of him to whose mem
ory he cheerfully pays this humble
tribute. He leaver two sisters and a
brother besides many relations and
friends to mourn his loss. R.
The Christian Advocate will
please copy.
BRANSFORD—Mrs.Edna Brans
ford, nee Fuller, was born Nov. 15th
1816; and died Jan. 9th, 1892, at
Chipley, Ga.
Her’s was a lovely Christian life.
Patient, industrious and cheerful,
she fulfilled all the duties of her sta
tion with Christian fidelity. Her
convictions on the great doctrines of
grace were clear and steadfast, and
held with the tenacity of a good con
science, “as under the law of Christ.”
A minister of the gospel who knew
her intimately for 40 years say, “she
loved all Christians as brethren, own
ed no other Master than Christ and
no other law in religion than His
word. I never heard an uncharita
ble word from her lips.” God gave
her a good degree of prosperity in
her worldly affairs but her chief de
sire seemed to be to “lay up treas
ures in heaven.”
She was a widow for twenty-five
years; and one only child survives
her, greatly afflicted with rheuma
tism. During her earthly sojourn
she met with many afflictions and be
reavements, but endured them as
coming from her Heavenly Father’s
hand. She was a refined, gracious
Christian lady whose hand was ever
stretched out, to shield and succor
the distressed, and exemplify the
virtues of Christly charity. She died
in the faith of Christ, and in hope of
seeing Him as He is. She doubtless
enjoys the “rest that remaineth to
the people of God.” H. D. D. S.
Greenville, Ga., April 28th 1892.
WHAT COMMENTARY SHALL I BUY?
That is a puzzling question to
many young pastors. The average
young pastor has not much money to
spend and he must be careful as to his
investments; but he needs and must
have some good commentary. Which
shall he choose? The American Bap
tist Publication Society has issued
the “American Commentary on the
New Testament” which, we be
lieve, meets a long-felt want, and
gives us a splendid commentary. It
is in seven volnmes,and can be had
for 16.00. Alvah Hovey, D. D., is
the editor, and such men as Broadus,
Clarke, Bliss, Hackett, Arnold, Ford
Gould, Smith, Pidge, Dargan, Stev
ens, Harvey, Kendrick, Winkler,
Williams and Sawtelle are the writ
ers. It combines features exegetical
and practical, explanatory and expos
itory We unhesitatingly cemmend
this commentary. If you cannot buy
it all at one time, bny the one you
most need first, and then you will
feel the need of others. This com
mentary will quicken your zeal for
Bible study, and that cannot be
said of every commentary.
THE CHRISTIAN INDEX: THURSDAY. 19. MAY 1892.
ABKED AND ANSWERED.
C. E. W. DOBBS, D. D.
At a recent missionary meeting a
brother said that the Baptists have
more converts among the heathen
than all other denominations com
bined. Can you give me the figures
verifying this claim ? A. M. f D.
This and similar statements have
been quite frequently made, but the
statistics of mission fields will show
their mistake. The latest tabulated
returns from the missionary societies
of the world show that in all their
fields of labor there are 10,311 sta
tions, 3,775 male, and 2,539 female
missionaries, 11,971 native preachers,
2,419 churches, 605,807 communi
cants or members, 11,960 schools,
575,829 pupils, and 319,282 Sun
day-school scholars. On strictly
pagan fields there are 426,564 “con
verts,” leaving 179,243'members in
mission churches in nominal Christian
lands, such as Germany, Mexico and
Italy. The Baptist missionary soci
eties of the world report only 210,-
653 members in their mission church
es, of whom 120,932 are in Christian
lands, and represent those proselyted
from other forms of professed Chris
tain faith. There are only 89,721
Baptists in pagan fields. Comparing
th'ese figures it will be seen that the
Baptists have about one-third of the
whole number of converts, or mem
bership, of mission churches. These
results are great when we consider
how little our people do for missions.
Why has the Revised Version
“sprinkled” instead of “dipped” in
Rev. 19:13? G. F. B.
You will notice the marginal note :
“Some ancient authorities read dip
ped in.” The facts are these: The
King James translators rendered the
passage, “He was clothed in a ves
ture dipped in blood.” In the Greek
manuscripts used by them, they found
the word bebammenon, the perfect
participle of the verb bapto, to dip.
The oldest of their manuscripts did
not reach further back than the 10th
century. Since 1611 there have been
brought to light manuscripts of the
New Testament dating as early as
the 4th century. In the best of these,
instead of bebammenon, the word is
rerantismenon, the perfect participle
of rantizo, to sprinkle. Scholarly
criticism accepted the authority as
decisive, and hence the rendering in
the Canterbury Revision, to which
G. F. B. refers. It may be added
that in the Vulgate, a Latin transla
tion made by Jerome in the fourth
century, the passage reads, “vesta
quae aspersa sanguine,” which the
Roman Catholic English Version ren
ders “a garment sprinkled with
blood.” Origen, in the third centu
ry, has “sprinkled.” The figure is
that of a warrior who comes from
the battle with the blood of his ene
mies sprinkled upon his garment.
Probably the seer had in mind the
vivid imagery of Isaiah 63:1,2. Some
suppose a reference to our Lord as
our priest with the blood of the sac
rifice spurting from the victim upon
his robe.
Our correspondent, G. F. B. finds
another trouble in the Revised Ver
sion. He wishes to know why Matt.
3:16 Has “from the water,” instead of
the old “out of.”
Because the approved Greek text
has the preposition apo, instead of
ek, in this place. In Mark 1:10, and
in Acts 8:39, the Revision has the
old “out of,” because ek is found in
the Greek. From the nature of the
case, Jesus had been in the water.
Just now our eye falls on this para
graph from the Western Recorder:
“As a proof that any candid man wliv
will read the New Testament ac
count of our Lord’s baptism will get
the impression that He was immersed,
we may cite two lines from N. P.
Willis, who cannot be suspected of
any bias toward the Baptists. De
scribing John the Baptist, Mr. Willis
says:
"Ho stood breast-high amid the running
stream
Baptizing as the Spirit gave him power."
In the Greek of the Apocrapha
(Tobit 6:2) it is said that “a fish
leaped up from (apo) the water.”
No one doubts where the fish was
before the leaping! So we constant
ly use the word from. For exam
ple : “I have just come from Atlan
ta.” Every one understands that I
was in Atlanta. “He has just come
from his bath.” Very likely the
man was in the water I
A Tennessee sister inquires as to
the meaning of the expression “by
and by” as found in Mark 6:25. She
says she doesn’t see why the execu
tion of John so closely followed the
request. But an immediate execu
tion is just what she requested. At
the time the King James’ translation
was made, “by and by,” instead of
denoting the indefinite future, signi
fied immediate, presently—that is,
the immediate future. The Revised
Version gives the correct force to
the Greek exantees by translating
forthwith. The word is found in Acts
10:33; 23:30. A different Greek word
(entheos) is found in Luke 17:7 and
21:9. Still another word is in Matt.
13:21. But in each instance the
meaning is straightway, immediately,
forthwith. See such passages as
Matt. 4:20; Mark 1:10; Luke 5:13;
John 18:27 ; Acts 12:10, and fifty oth
er places. Luke 21:9 is a striking
instance in which our old version
gives a meaning now just the oppo
site of our Lord’s prophecy. Every
one who wishes to study the New
Testament closely and intelligently,
at least ought to carefully consult the
Revised Version.
KEV. WM. HOLLINSHED,
Pastor of the Presbyterian church
of Sparta. N. J., voluntarily writes
strongly in favor of Hood’s Sarsapa
rilla. He says. “Nothing I know of
will cleanse the blood, stimulate the
liver or clean the stomach like this
remedy. I know of scores and scores
who have been helped or cured by
it.”
The highest praise has been won
by Hood’s Pills for their easy, yet
efficient actions.
IN THE INTEREST OF STABILITY.
Few things contribute more to it
than prayerful and thoughtful selec
tion of a pastor. That was not a bad
old custom of setting apart a day or
days of prayer for divine direction,
when a pastor was wanted. On the
selection, the requirements ought to
be character, biblical and teaching
ability, unction from the Holy One,
good sense, stability and tenacity of
purpose. All these things are some
times forgotten in eagerness for en
tertainment.
The call of a pastor, as the rule,
should be for an indefinite time. Un
til a church finds some one deemed
worthy of this confidence, it is
not ready to make a call. Annual
calls, held by some to be reassuring,
more frequently induce instability,
and keep the pastor in a state of ner
vous uncertainty. It is essential to
his highest efficiency that he feel en
trenched in the judgment and confi
dence of his people. This is a ful
crum on which to fix Ins'lever.
Nor should he be in doubt about
temporal, any more than moral, sup
port. There is often a variable and
fitful attention to this matter when it
is not neglected. Let everything of
the kind be done on system and
principle.
It is a good plan for the pastor
thoroughly to interview every can
didate for membership prior to their
coming before the church. He will
be better satisfied, as they will, in af
ter years. It will generally be as
certained whether their action is
mere impulse or principle.
People ought to attend on the
ministry of the word, not so much to
enjoy an intellectual treat, or even to
get Gospel comfort, as to be instruct
ed. Nor should they at all be dis
satisfied, if the preacher turn sharp
points on the conscience! reveals by
the divine help, to his hearers, the
hidden evils of the heart.
If the pastor is not always on the
flood-tide of apparent success, let not
him or his people be discouraged.
There is an ebb and flow in all
things; and the great principles we
are considering always develop re
sults in the end. We need to feel
that the gospel is the power of God
unto salvation, manifest or latent,
whenever and wherever ministered
in a scriptural way, although we
know not and see not the way of the
Spirit for the time.
The honor of the cause and of the
Master is a matter of great moment,
independent even of the members
converted; a fact too often forgotten
in the zeal for numbers and fame;
and this honor is made conspicuous,
when things are stable.
E. B. Treat.
How’s This.
We offer One Hundred Dollars
Reward for any case of Catarrh that
cannot be cured by If all’s Catarrh
Cure.
F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props-,
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We the undersigned, have known
F. J. Cheney for the last 15 years,
and believe him perfectly honorable
in all business transactions and finan
cially able to carry out any obliga
tion made by their firm.
West & Truax, Wholesale Drug
gist, Toledo, O.
W aiding, Kinnan & Marvin,
W holesale Druggists, Toledo, O.
Hall’s Catarrh Cure is taken in
ternally, acting directly upon the
blood and mucous surfaces of tho
system. Price 75c. per bottle. Sold
by all Druggists. Testimonials
free.
_ Playing at house cleaning is
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Gold Dust
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CHICAGO, ST. LOUIS, NEW YORK, PHILADELPHIA, BOSTON,
BALTIMORE, NEW ORLEANS, SAN FRANCISCO,
PORTLAND, ME., PORTLAND, ORE., PITTSBURGH AND MILWAUKEE.
Are You Going to Buy a Ginning Outfit This Season ?
DO YOU WANT a |
Engines, Boilers, Saw Mills, |lm I
Cotton Gins, Cotton Presses, tpS S JR
Cotton Seed Elevators,Mow- I i«in .■u. _
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MALLARY BROS.SCO.,
MACON, - - GEORGIA.
SHORTER COLLEGE
lAOR1 A OR YOUNG IvJVDIEJS.
ROME, ... - GEORGIA.
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6. Twenty accomplished teachers. DR. A. J. BATTLE, President, or
6. A splendid music department. PROF IVY W DUGGAN
7. A famous school of art.
8. A finely equipped deprrtinent of physical business Manager.
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iIWOCORNISH & CO.,
fctal "HF
Tipped Tbrouc’.
See Warne “EVER READY** on buck of Each Stay.
Acknowledged the best dress stay On the Market
Made with Outtn Pcrcha on both aide* of steel and warranted water-proof. All other stays are
made differently and will rust. He ware of Imitations. Take none but the “Ever Heady.”
Manulacturcd by the YPSILANTI DRESS STAY MFC. CO., Ypsilanti, Mloh.
Foil SALE MY ALL JOBBERS AND RETAILERS.
SPECIAL 1 MODEL DRESS STEEL CO., 74 Grand St., New York.
DEPOTS, f BROWN A METZNF'* 535 Market Street, San Francisco.
Premiums For New Subscribers
TO THE
Christian Index
Premiums arc given only to old subscribers for obtaining new ones.
To any old subscriber whose subscription is poid in advance sending us
the name of one new subscriber with s2.ot> we will give any one of the fol
lowing books:
FOR ONE NEW SUBSCRIBER.
Spurgeon’s Life—by Geo. C. Lorimer D. I)., (Postage paid.)
Spurgeon’sLife by Russell H. Conwell, (Postage paid.)
Drummond’s Addresses, Cloth, (Postage paid)
My Point of View.
The Gospel In Enoch—by Dr. H. 11. Tucher (Postage paid.)
For 10 newsubscribcrs and S2O will send the works of Charles Dickens—
-15 Volumes handsomely bound in cloth and gold. Address,
Christian Index,
57 J South Broad Street, Atlanta, Go.
Elliots Parchment Bui Pwi ha FREE! -
To Dairymen anti nthera who will u.i'lt, we will eend bull a ream, Sall, free. If they will forward
anoetat pay uoatage. Try the HLHI Hunru WHAPFER Avoid imltai lon*.
gmarant A. U. ELLIOT A CO., Paper Mai.ufacturora I’ulladelphla, Pa.
GEORGIA RAILROAD CO
Stone Mountain Route.
1. Augusta, G a., January 14, 1892.
ino following passenger schedule will oper
ate on this road.
trains run by goth Meridian time.
STATIONS. Day Fast Fast
Mail. Mail Train
AYAP ! “l ta 800 am 1115 pm 2 45p m
A 1 U ecat W - 819 “ 1136 “13 00—
StoneMount’n.... 842 " 1201am'3 15 “
Lithonia 903 “ 12 23 “ 3 29 “
» Gony-l’S 917 " 1239 “340 -*
Covington.. 942 “ 107 “ 369 “
A 'u’SYV L , u ' cle 10 08 “ 136 “ 4 19 “
Ar
u Madison 1045 “ 218“ U 46 “
Greensboro 1130 “ 312 “ 20 "
Lv Union Point 1201 pm 330 “ 6 30 “
Ar Athens...... 515 " 700 “
Crawfordville 1223 “ 307 “ 5 50 “
Lv Barnett 12 41 “ 412 “ 600 “
Ar Washington 230 “ too “
Norwood 12 56 “ 428 “ 6 17 "
Lv Camak 117 “ 439 “ g .>q •<
Ar Macon 440 “ ~
“Thomson 13.8 “ 501 “ G2l “
Dearing 158 “ 520 “ 658 “
Harlem 209 “ 533 “ 709 "
Grocetown 232 “ 555 “ 728 “
Ar Augusta 315 “_i6 35 “800 “
All trains daily. Sleepers Atlanta toCharles
ton on night express. Pullman bullets parlor
car Atlanta to Augusta on fast mail.
ACCOMMDATION TRAINS.
Lv Atlanta., 855 am 12 lop m 3 25pm!620pm
Ar. Decatur. 923 “ 12 40 " 349 “ 655 "
“ Clarkson 12 57 “ 405 “ 711 “
“ Covington ■■■■■ 1535 “ .
UNION POINT AND WHITE PLAINS R. R.
Leave Union Point "1010 a m *5 40 p m
Arrive Li loam 10 35 “ 605 “
“ White Plains 1110 “ 640 “
Leave White Plains *8 00 “ *3 30 “
“ Siloam 835 “ 405 “
Arrive Un ion Point 800 “ 430 “
•Except Sunday.
J. W. GREEN, Gen’l Manager,
E. R. DORSEY, Gen’l Pa3s. Agt.
JOE. W. WHITE, Trav. Pass. Agt.
General Offices Aug usta, Ga (
fJGEORGIA MIDLAND AND GULF R. R.
'"The only line running Double Daily Train?
and Through Coach between Atlanta and Co
lumbus via Griffin.
NORTHBOUND DAILY.
, No. 51. No. 53.
Lv Thomasville, S. F. & A 7 45 a m
Ar Albany, “ 10 40 “
“ Dawson, C. S. Ry 1152 “
“ Columbus “ 2 53p m
Lv GM Ry sooam 550 “
Ar Warm Springs “ 757a in 524 “
“ Williamson “ 924 “ 533 “
“ Griffin " 9 48 “ 550 "
Atlanta, C. RR 11 30 “ 735 “
SOUTH BOUND DAILY,
, . , No. 50. No. 52.
Lv. Atlanta, C. RR 720 am 410 pm
Ar Griffin “ 820 am 600 “
Williamson, G. M. Ry.. 924 “ 634 “
“ Warm Springs “ .... 1027 “ SOI “
“ Columbus “ .... 1155 “ 968 “
“ Dawson C. S. Ry 2 17 p m
“ Albany, “ 305 “
" Thomasville, S. P. &W. 610 “
Through Coach on trains Nos. 50 and 53 be
tween Columbus and Atlanta.
Ask foJ tickets to Columbus and poinst
South over Georgia Midland and Gulf R. R.
_ T M - E - Gray Supt.
Clifton James, Gen. Pass. Agent.
COLUMBIAN
CYCLOPEDIA 1892.
32 Vols., 2GOOO pages, S7OOO illustrations,
containing the matter of other cyclope
dias REVISED, and thousands of articles
NO TIN ANY OTHER, with an UNA
BRIDGED DICTIONARY. The thing
YOU WANT, the BEST. Don’t buy till
you see it. Sample free.
“Comprehensive, accurate, complete.’’
—Henry N. Day, D. D. LL.D.
“I like it much. It is late, Including
almost everything, and the price is low.”
—I. R. Branham, D. D., editor Indbx.
for our liberal terms.
A. S. JONES, General Southern Agent,
mar!7tf 71 Whitehall St., Atlanta, Ga.
SOUTHERN
SHORTHAND
AND
COLLECE
Atlanta, ga.
Best commercial College in the South,
Shorthand, Book-keeping, Penmanship, Tele
graphy Drawing, Typewriting, Mathematics.
Spelling, etc., taught by practical and exper
ienced teachers. Hundreds of graduates in
lucrative positions. Send for large catalogue
and circulars which will be mailed free.
A. C. Briscoe, Manager,
L. W. Arnold, Asst. Manager,
Miss Allce Tcller, Typist,
F. B. white,, Prin. Book keeper.
Our “TLZ.UE APOLLO RING”
Is tho thinaost ground Razor made, and noedj
£2 00 but little stropping. If you want to
” w and u.-e the best Kazoritis
possitde to make,send us
WIDTHS. ”8”
We carry a groat variety of Razors, but have selected
this t-ne us the most desirable we or any one caa offer.
This is a Royal Raxor. believe us.
Sent by mail. Postage paid.
At "ng a lodge, Madison, Ino.
Bmay3mos
TMHOOL-:-AGENCY,
Hare, Pope & Dewberry,
MANAGERS,
MONTGOMERY, - - - ALABAMA.
0
UF” Both Schools and Teachers in constant
demand. Schools Furnished with Teachers
FREE of COST. Teachers Aided in Securing
Schools at Small Cost. School Property Rent
ed and Sold.
NOW IS THE TIME.
So d for circulars. apr7tf
Estey Organ Co.
53 Peachtree Street,
- - GrA.
o
Tlu “Unrivaled” Estey PIANOS!
—THE—
"Matchless” Decker Bros. Pianos
9. ttlfe
.’qkM
leads the World.
T —’ _
P<V»<.OFMDIVT OR rm
To lot nxhree n ot v.ltuNo
eiM'.lloual work.tho ntxm
will lx, (.nt to *ll appllouta ■UULUwi
n .... Mm “* F " '
Room 163 MKCMowAr. «tw roair.
lumaysm
7