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J0S ON SUN
UI SCHOOL LESSON
by R ev Dr. Linscott for
-
L International Bible Study
Club in ^is P a P er -
July 25th 19o9.
I r s Second Missionary ii: 13-34. Journey
L Acts xv T
llden Text. Ood is a Spirit; and
lit KJtand worship him truth. must Johniv:24. worship
in
1L16-Can folly any and true sin man, which at
I fed* 0 a«e the without
so eagerly follow,
Lrit being stirred?
I 17 ^Notwithstanding that we
Lssarily. |1 e should, have trades should and call- not,
pursue, or
Ihief [“involved concern be spiritual the tremendous truth, and
in
J, (This question must be of ans- the
]i„ writing by members
Les Lies 18-21.-The Epicureans philosophy and
le, had a contrary
state briefly what they each
iht.
L [hieh brings develops the more the nobler lasting char- hap
and pleasures
a life devoted to the
| naP| or a life devoted to service
Lew, and to self denial?
■bat as a matter of fact, is the sub
ice of what paid taught?
lould lew we lend a respectful ear to
theories of life, and eternity,
Iject them without examination?
ferse 22.—Which is the better man.
Ljve skeptic, or an indifferent and
ightless Christian?
Ing Ihich is preferable to be everspec
about God, or to have no
ghtconcerning him?
belief in and a longing for God,
lliar to Christianity?
by a heathen who has never come
I touch with Christianity, find out,
[know the true God?
that then is the advantage for a
I hearted heathen coming into con
with Christianity?
erse23— Can one man who knows
I be the means of imparting that
wledge to another who desires to
r him?
ferse 21.—How do we know that
[made all things?
1 does fill heaven and earth with
^ Power,
off he
1 our
•!■ i i L.
Its Gasoline Engine Power
^ kas nas SUDDlanted supplanted hand.nAuio** hand-power, uiinA.r\Aun>e wind-power, horse-power [irtrcu.nnwFf and and water¬ w af<*T
I power on all
No up-to-date, well managed farms.
other kind of power is to be considered for farm use or gen
Mai use.
lt S0,ar surpasses any other available that it is only a ques
,• °n o I time when power
it will be in general use.
* S * CSS e *P ens * ve less troublesome and less dangerous than steam
.
S ° much so fact, that gasoline engines are rapidly replacing
steam >
THE engine everywhere.
1 H - C- GASOLINE ENGINE is the most practical engine for
( ° r ^ enera ^ because the
re use > it is designed by experts who know
‘r lnsnres en,S of its a P ower lor this purpose. It has few working parts,
jl being easily understood.
«11 a dT ^ Sre US 3 < * emous power * nser rate 1° and are in the the market advantages for a gasoline of owning engine, an
1 H c e you many
HENRY T. HUSON, AGENT
All Kinds of
IF CEMENT WORK
L Building Blocks, Solid Work, Tiling,
Wer and in fact anything to be
3 jj ne /? bs Only Cement. the best First material class work used, on
’
us a trial order.
BETHLEHEM CONCRETE CO.
Bethlehem, Georgia.
his presence; but does he not
dwell in temples that are made in
which to worship him?
\ erse 25. While God does not need
the support of man’s hands, does he
not desire the worship and love of
men’s hearts?
How does God give to all “life and
breath, and all things?”
Will we in heaven be able to see
God, in any different way from the
way in which it is our privilege to see
him now?
Verse 26.—What is the evidence
that all races of men, sprang from the
same original stock?
Has God had anything to do with
the national, and geographical divis¬
ions of the globe, as they exist to-day?
Has God had anything to do with
our present individual conditions?
Verses 27-28.-What is both the
chief joy and object of life?
Is it possible for every man to find
God if he will but seek him, and what
is the only condition for seeking him?
How do you conceive of the thought
that “in him we live and move and
have our being,” can you illustrate
the thought with air, that is both in
us, and around us?
Verse 29.—Can any work of art rep¬
resent God to any practical advantage?
Verses 30-31.—What makes the need
for repentance?
In what way will Jesus judge the
world?
Verse 32. -Why did some mock
when they heard of the resurrection?
Verses 33-34—Did all who were true
to God accept of Paul’s message, and
were all untrue to God who rejected
it?
Lesson for Sunday Aug. 1st. 1909.
—Close of Paul’s Missionary Journey.
Acts xviii:l-22.
Let me do your laundry work.
I have the Troy Steam Laundry,
and will do it as cheep as any body.
I will do up any thing from a
circus tent to a pocket handerchief.
Leave order at McGarity’s stable
Phone 167-L.
HARRY AIKEN.
FOR SALE.—One of the best in¬
vestments in city property ill Coving¬
ton. Lot 100x180 feet, with five good
tenant houses on it. Will sell at a
bargain. See me at the Flowers Ho¬
tel. R. L. BROWN. tf.
FOR SALE.—A good farm near
Oxford. Easy terms. R. E. Everitt.
THE COVINGTON NEWS
OUTLOOK GOOD FOR
FIFTEEN GENT COTTON
Predictions Freely Made That The
f leecy Staple ill Bring 1 5
Cents By December I 5.
they are talking about ftfteen-cent
cotton on the floor of the Savannah
Cotton Exchange,” says the Savannah
I ress. “Predictions are freely made
there that before December 15 cents a
pound will be paid for the staple. A
farmer who will spend an hour or
! niore talking to the cotton men of
Savannah will go home convinced that
he is going to get enough for his crop
this year to pay off all the back debts
cind reduce the size of the mortage on
the farm.
1 iiose who are looking for extra
high prices for the staple are basing
their assertions upon the crop reports
and the great damage for actual cot¬
ton that is already being felt. The
government’s cotton report of June
25 showed a general average of but
74.6. This was very poor. The usual
average condition is about 86
“With the government forecasting a
poor cotton crop, with heavy rains
throughout the cotton belt at a critical
time and with the stock from last
year’s crop considerably reduced as
compared to former years, there seems
nothing for the price to do but ad¬
vance. If it does not advance, there
is going to be much disappointment
from the planter straight through to
the exporter. If the south can get
fifteen cents a pound for cotton this
season, it will help some to meet the
high prices for necessities which the
government tariff barons seem deter¬
mined Americans shall pay.”
If we should have fifteen-eent cot¬
ton this fall, how this country would
revel in good times! The panic would
be forgotton and there would be such
an era of prosperity dawn as to make
former years look like thirty-cents.
There is some reason to believe that
we will have not only a big cotton
crop this year, but that the price will
be twelve cents or better.
In this section the crops are fine.
Cotton is looking well, and unless
some bad seasons come, a full crop
will be made.
Things look good to us.
ORCHID HUNTING.
The Terrors and the Dangers el
Tropical Forest.
It is not a pretty story, this narra¬
tive of a trip up the Orinoco, but you i
may understand orchid people better
if you read it.
“It began unluckily," said he. “I
took a partner because I'd learned that
the dark places of earth are hard upon
a man by himself. 1 met him at Port
of Spain, and he was eager for the
adventure because he had just abscond
ed from a British mercantile house in j
Havana and the Orinoco sounded to
him like a haven.
“We hired a few negroes. Our real i
guides we would pick up at Angos¬
tura. One day while waiting for the ;
stores to be packed 1 took my partner |
out to show him what an orchid was.
“Near the Fitch lake i saw one in
a tree and ordered one of the negro
boys to shin up and get it. He would
not. A deadly snake dwelt in that
tree, he declared. lie was afraid- help¬ j
afraid of snakes! Nice, efficient,
ful boy to take into tropical forests,
wasn't he?
“It was insubordination before the
expedition had even started. So 1
cuffed him and handed him my hunt¬
ing knife. ‘Bring down that flower
j and also the snake’s head,' I ordered.
I and, whining, trembling, be went up
the trunk. He was detaching the or
chid from where it clung when a
thing like a spear, as black as bis own
skin, suddenly struck at the boy's j
wrist. He screamed with terror and, !
toppling down, writhed with pain. He j
died, and 1 felt a gloom settle on my i
spirits. took rafts
“Well, at Angostura we
and six guides upstream. First one
guide died of fever; then another was
bltteu by poisonous insects. One fell
in with—or into—an alligator. We
needed meat, and the skin was worth
a good deal, so half in revenge, half
in curiosity, we went out and plugged
holes in the monster. When the guides
cut it open they stooped and drew
things out—the bones and the cotton
clothes of the guide this cannibal rep¬
tile had swallowed. The very knot
was still in his sarong. Oh. don’t
squirm! This ts orchid hunting.
“\Ve had three guides left at the
end of the second month, when, pad¬
dling along one day where the vines
overreached and let snaky tendrils
draggle down, we came to a fifty yard
clearing. We saw there the sides of
three canoes, half smothered with rap¬
id growing vegetation, and 1,500 alli¬
gator skins well salted, but decaying.
Hanging to the roof of what had been
a kind of lean-to were 100orchid plants
—withered and dead. Ou the floor lay
two rusty rifles and two skeletons,
Out by the ashy place where the fire
had been was a third skeleton. Up
between the ribs were cheerfully grow
ing some gay weeds.” - Everybody's
Magazine.___j
Maude— How old is Grace? May- :
At least twenty-five. Maude—How do i
you know? May—I heard her say that j j
bo girl ought to marry before she wa»
Cleveland Leader.
INSURED.
What Are You Paying For Protection?
Let’ s figure a little and see if you are getting it as
cheap and at the same time as safo as you should, and
ior an example we will figure on a $5000.00 policy for a
man 30 years old. In the best of the old line companies
the rate for a non-participating 20 year pay policy is
$27.86 a year per thousand, so a policy for $5,000.00 will
cost $139.30 a year for 20 years, and these premiums at 5
per cent, compound interest will amount to $4836.47. Not
a bad investment at all considering the protection you
have had. But, let’s see if we can’t beat that. The I. O.
F., financially the strongest Fraternal Insurance Co. in the
world will give you the best policy on the market, provid¬
ing total disability benefit of one half the face policy, old
age benefit etc. Will you give this protection including
Court dues and everything for $76.32. These premiums
at same rate of interest for 20 years amounts to $2650.00.
So the insured if he dies at any time during 20 years only
leaves $5,000.00 and at the end of 20 years only has the
$5,000.00 insurance. The old line policy has cost $4,836.-
49 and the Fraternal $2,650.23, a saving of $2,186.26.
If y°u live to be 70 years old, at the time of the maturity of the Fraternity
Policy at which time the I. O. F., begins paying back ONE-TENTH of IN¬
SURANCE EVERY YEAR until all is paid back TO INSURED.
Counting same rate of interest on amount invested in premiums there will be a
big saving. So hadn’t you better investigate this matter of protection for the
loved ones at once. Be a Forrester with us in the Independent Order of For¬
resters, Safe Sound and Conservative. 35 years old.
SURPLUS JULY 1st, 1909, $13,280,594.37.
Ernest E. Parker, D. S. C. R.
Organizing Department of Georgia.
\ Fine Chairs and Davenports at
I
i
i • EVERITT’S FURNITURE STORE
Just received a solid car load of Chairs and Dav¬
enports. Never before have we been able to show
such a magnificent selection of chairs and daven¬
ports. We have the three escentials for business,
Quanity, Quality and price.
The line embraces the latest styles in genuine
leather Turkish rockers, sleepy hollow rockers,
mahogany and oak rockers in the genuine silk
plush and leather, push button Morris chairs,
porch chairs, bed room and dinner chairs, and a
big assortment of childrens chairs. See my show
window filled with fine Davenports.
Undertaking Department
Our Undertaking Department is the best in the city,
having the only licensed embalmer. Calls answered day
or night.
I j
. R. E. EVERITT
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