The Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, GA.) 1906-1907, October 19, 1906, Image 12

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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN. fiijda?. October is. tore. 64 Thriving Stores—Factory to Wearer Tfflll T| WEAR WHILE YOU PAY You take the clothing on your first visit here—you wear while you pay— a small sum each pay day is all we ask. Confidential Credit given .to all Stylish Fall Clothing For Men, Women and Children Men’s Overcoats • • $7(o $20 Men’s Suits 7 to 20 Boys’ Overcoats ■ . 5 to 12 Boys’ Suits • • • 2 to 12 Ladies* Suits ’ - 9 to 32 Coats and Raincoats - • 8 to 22 Ladies' Hats $2 to $10 Genesee Shoe for Men The Best $3.50‘ Shoe for Men on the market today Wean looter, looks better tod ii just as comfortable as any $5.00 Shoe. Every pair guaranteed to give satisfaction. MAIL ORDERS Ms» mi ▼s.tw* fry Mil Send fcf Fret Cwilyi and ttyk UtA. AMmi Heater < IttnH—Ca. fetterr*. latheeler. f>. Y. fssaa^s Over . 71 Whitehall S treet. THE PARABLE OF THE TALENTS 1 —Matt. 25: 14-3. By DR. GEORGE A. BEATTIE. Geldtn Tsxt: A faithful man shall abound with blsssings.—Prov. 23:20. * The last lesson was Intended to ten '.-h Ihe Importance of watching, and this on*, which Immediately follows, t"‘ teach th* duty of working. • In ItheJaat lesson He told them He coming again, and In this lesson He tails dlls disciples how they must improve the interval between Hie go ing away amt His second coming. This parable must not be confounded with the parable of the pound* record- ed by Luke. Th* time end place were different. , The latter was spoken while on His »•' y t<> Jerusalem before He mads HI* triumphal entry, the former on ihe thlid day after His entry Into the city, «hlle' sealed on the Mount of Olives. The oneewaa spoken to hla disciples mill the multitude, while the other was spoken only to Hla disciples. Hr would teach them that they must not .It down, und Idly wait for His enm- Inr. but, earnestly seek to forward His Imprests according to the ability which wfi given them, and that each should t>n suitably rewarded, according to hla fidelity. The parable Itself la not difficult to explain. Th* householder represents Christ, who goes away, the servants who were entrusted utib the talents represent all His followers, and Ihe talents, all the gift#'and graces, tho time and faculties bestowed on each. The rewards bestowed are for fidel ity. The parable also teaches (his truth, that all we have Is the gift of God, that He has only entrusted It to our keeping, expecting us to make the best possible uae of It; that we are only His servants, and that some day He will vail u» to give an account of our stewardship. We will be rewarded not on account of the amount that has been given us. but for the use we have made of It. The reward of the .man who dou bled his two talents was the same ns the man who doubled hla five talents, and If the man who received only one talent had doubled It, his reward would have been the name. God blesses and rewards us for using wltsl we have. We have no right to wrap our pound In a napkin or hide our talent in the ground. We cannot expert to Increase what God has given us unless we put It In the place where It’can he multiplied. In the spring time, when Ihe Ice and snow have disappeared and be neath ihe sunshine and showers, win ter's king has relaxed hla grasp upon the streams nnd soli, Ihe farmer thinks of his husbandry, and In fancy he tees his fields of cotton white for "AT THE FAIR” home comers and pteaiure seekers are welcome at our exhibit, Just inside of the main gate entrance at the Fair ground, where our representative will take pleasure In explaining to you the mer- .VULCANITE Roofling. Do not fail to come and aeo ua and register your name. S«e that (his Seal is on ever* Roll. ATLANTA SUPPLY CO. SOLE STATE AGENTS FOR GEORGIA. 29*31 South Forsyth Street, Atlanta, Ga. C. GREENFIELD. Fret. C.I. PEEK, Ut'i A 25% INVESTMENT An Investment Yielding a Guaranteed 25 Per Gent Per Annum. I have one of the best patented machines on the market. On account of the increasing demand for them I can use more working capital. If yon have $lt>0 and upward spare capital vou can, without risk, secure the above income, payable annually, semi-an nually or quarterly. Principal can be withdrawn on 60 days’ notice. Address * JOHN HENDERSON, P. O. Box 165. Nashville, Tenn. ELECT H.-P, VICE-CHANCELLOR Special to Tlio Georgian. New Orleans, f-a., Oct. I*.—Supreme lodge, Knights of Pythias, yesterday elected Henry P. Brown, of Cleburne. Texas, supreme vice chancellor. Charles A. Barnes, of Jacksonville, Ills., succeeds to the office of supreme chancellor by the rules of office. It. X. C. White, of Nashville, was re elected grand keeper of records and seals. The grand keepers of records and seels of ths association elected U. 8. Barnes, of Milwaukee, WIs., president [ and B. W. Bartlet, of Little Rock, Ark- secretary. The order of Rathbone Sisters and | the Order of Pythian Sisters are dis cussing a plan of amalgamating the I two societies and such an amalama- tlon Is expected to be announced to day. the harvest, or waving with the golden grain. If he believes In Qod'a agency and providence he knows that the au-1 tumnal harvest will be a divine confer ment. And yet he has learned from his ex- I terlence that God has a peculiar way of making His conferment. It he did not sow the seed and till the soil, It I would be nothing less than presump tion for him to expect a harvest. He knows that his'reaping depends upon his sowing and Ids cultivation; that what he hopes to have depends upon what he has. In the seed he has on hand, he see*, the potency and the | promise of the harvest. The same truth Is Illustrated In ev- | ery occupation In life. The merchant bases his hopes of profit from the sale of goods he has on hand. Tho teacher, the lawyer. Ihe doctor, may safely predicate their success from the amount of capital they have on hand, and their practical application of II. It Is well to pray for an nburtdant harvest, but not until you hnve sown the seed; It Is well for the business or professional man to pray for success n business, but not until he has made every effort. God’s blessings come In the shape of additions to whnt wc al ready have. Of this we have an Il lustration In th* multiplication of the woman’s oil and the loaves In the I hands of the disciples. This Is whet Christ meant when he said; "To him that hath shall be given." When a member of the family is sick we send for the doctor before we send for the minister. We do not begin to pray until we ourselves have done all we can. Wc make use of the means and then ask God's blessing to follow- them. As much of the cure will be God’s work, as the harvest Is God's work. We put one kernel In tho round and Ood produces nlnety-nlno ,.i the harvest. So ninety-nine per cent of the cure may be God's energy blessing one per cent of medicine. Even the one per cent mny be nn exaggeration. It must be admitted that God could cure without any medicine, nor can It he denied that hi alnswer to prayer He does sometimes, but It Is not God's ordinary method. If Christ wanted as many loaves as He could get for the miracle of the loaves to lean on, nnd If Ihe husband man wants as many seed kernels ss nre necessary In the spring for tho harvest In the autumn, why should we not use every appliance suggested by skill and experience for the recovery of the sick, that there may be something large enough for the great miracle of divine healing to have room sufficient for Its rootc to fasten on? We should show at least as much respect for medical methods nnd appliances as Christ did In Ihe restoration of the blind man, when He conformed to the customary usage of anointing. God wants us to Increase what we have by using It to the best advantage. This principle win help us In all the relations of life. When a young man stands on Ihe threshold of hla career. It Is a pretty serious question with him whether he Is going to succeed or not, nnd he may as well understand at the outset that what he shnll become by development and Acquisition largely depend* on what Is In him. You never could gel niahog. any out of a pine log, nor make a stiver cup out of pewter. Men are constantly proving failures for the reason they are trying to do some thing for which they have no talent or aptitude. . . , A gentlemnn once was asked If he was going lo send his hoy to college, when he replied: "God forbid thnt I should lay out five thousand dollars on a len cent boy." There may he ten cent boys, but If there nre, here Is Ihe parable of the talents to the point. God expects from us according to our ca pacity. The mnn with one talent could nave doubled his capital as well as the one that had five. Recause he thought he could do so little he failed to moke any effort. "Neglect not the gift that Is In thee" pertains to Ihe least gifted as well ns the most gifted. Once before the session of a church now the way of life. It was ihe custom of the pastor to ask each one coming Into Ihe chinch what speclnl work he would he willing to undertake. In this case he whs Inclined to omit the question. Ho knew he could not teach a class In the Bund or pray to edlflc: meeting, but he asked Ike question to hear what the poor man would say. and he answered “that he could ask people lo come lo church,” and after that, on every Babbath. Ihe tnsn would go to Ihe hotels or stand on the street corner nnd Invite people t,o come to church. He did this for years, nnd when he died the pastor slated at his funeral that he had been Instrumental in sav ing more than a score of souls. He hsd hut one talent, and that was very small, but he used It. and won many stars for his crown. Get the King Quality and You Get the Best PRICED WITHIN THE REACH OF ALL We are just opening a very large line of Electro Plated Hollow Ware and Novelties, Truth of it is never since we have sold - Silverware and Cutlery have we had such a beautiful showing as right now, our prices are the very lowest and for which you can secure equal value. If you always want some thing to represent the amount you invest, you cau get it right here. Shaving Case $4.50. 4-Piece Tea Set $8.00 to $20. Single Stick 75c to $4.00, 5 Lights $7.50. Fern Dishes $1.50 to $6.00 Bread Tray $1.50 to $6.00. Baker $1.75 to $4.00. Shaving Mug and Brush $2.00 to $5.00. Silver Cup, this one $1.00. - Sugar and Cream, $4.00 to $5.00 per pair. Bonbon Baskets $1.75 to $3.00. This special Bread Tray only $1.50. Syrup Stand $1.50 to $6.00. Crumb Set from $2.00 to $5.00 This is the very season for mak ing various gifts, - such as wed dings, birthdays, anniversaries, friendly gifts and otherwise, nnd right, in our place you can fiud all that's good enough, and the prices are reasonable enough to please anybody. Butter Dishes from $1.50 to $6.50. We have a tremendf^s .line of Community Silver, and every piece of it is absolutely guaranteed for twenty-five years. Our line of Cutlery, both pocket and table, is very hard to beat, either in price or quality. King Hardware Co. 53 PEACHTREE STREET. ft "Let non* hear you Idly raying There le nothing I can do. While the fields are white,, and harveat waiting. , And the Master calls for you. "If you can not enmt the ocean, And the heathen lands explore. You can find the heathen nearer— You can find them at your door.” If all the burled talents could be ex humated and pul to use. what a reve nue there would .be for the kingdom. However mediocre our talent, however circumscribed our sphere, we .-nn do something; do what we can. and God will bless us and reward us as fully as though we had 'been-* genius, and our field had been world-wide. ^_Knd owed with mueh nr little, when He comes He will call us to give an account of our stewardship. • w 1 Thank God for the privilege of work ing. Live with your harness on; die with your harness on, os Bam Jonas did. When ihe Master comes let Him find you working as well aa watching, and not all the symphonies that ever sighed music, not nil the sweet sounds of whispered love that fell on listening enr, will equal Ihe ecstacy that will come to your soul,vwhen you hear the Master saying', "Well done, thou good and faithful servant; enter into the Joy of thy Lord." SOUTHERN RAILWAY. Trains Ltavt Atlanta. Nsw Terminal Station, corner Mitchell and Madison Avonuo. S. B.-Foliowtuc scbadalo floors, pab- llssed ooiy ss tafermsUoa sad are not sum rente-.:: ton a. U.—No. 3. raii.Y. Local to Btr mlngham. staking all slops: arming in lllrmlnohntn 14:1k s. a-. »*) A. M.-.V. IX DAILY. "CHICAGO AND CINCINNATI LfMtTjCD." •olid eostlbnira train Atlanta to Cluelnnsu wits' out change. rouiN»etl of vettlhaled .lay rosettes and Pullman tlnwlne mom sieep- Inx earn. Arrives Korns t*» s. m.; Out- tattooes 1:43 s. m.; Cincinnati XM p. eat cltsvUw sad Son Valley. — .— Jiesls between At- Inuts and cinrinnatL • JO A. M.-ho. W DAILY, lo Griffin and Columbus Arrives UrtCIn I:U a. tu.: Co lumbus 10 s. nt. «:iS A. U— O. IX DAILY, local to Mseon, Brunswick non Jacksonville. Makes ali stops . arriving kacoa t:U a. in.; liruav alck 4 p. m.t Jacksonville 7:40 p. in. 7:00 A. kV-Ao. ». DAILV.-T'nllmso ts Birmingham. Memphis, Kansas city usd Colorado Bprlogs. Arrives Memphis tog 8 . Ei Kansas City 4:tt a. til., and Colorado prings s:!k a. to. 1*0 A. M.-ho. la DAILY.—Local lo Charlotte. Danville/ Richmond nnd Ashe- IVuoSriJo. yiKftfittsnsu ad Soutii western Limited. Electric light. o. t-tmiie.1. Electric llgbi Bleeping, library, observation and clu ears through without change. Dining car, verve all meals ea rente, arrives Wash- isgtoi k.i! it. m.t New York IDs* t, tu. l:OI P. M.—No.. 40, DAILr.—New York IDpreso. Hoy creche* between Atlanta end Washington. Meeners tietweeo Atlanta. Cbarlotifc and Washington. Arrives Wash- lagton 11*4 a. is.: New York 4 p. i. ‘ U:Is P. M.-NO. A DAILY.—Local fer Macon, arriving Miron t:w p. m. CM P. M—St•. U DAILY.—Mgeon and •leeping*’ea?’• nd"'i»?’eoocb« t ‘to Birlnlng* 4:1# P. hi.—No. IX DAILY, eieept Sun day. "Air U** *»*il4**|© Toccoa. - (■» P. M.—No. SX DAILY^Grifrio '.nd Col not tats. Pullman palace stvrptug cur •tu. .tug vouches. 4*4 p. M-—No. » daily.—local to ray. •renting room sail steeping rgrs rlnsstl nod Memphis and Chattaaooga'ro Louisville. Arrives Home 7*0 p. sstDaltns 1*4 p. nt.: Chattanooga t:SA a, m.: Memphis 1*0 a, nt.; Louisville s*0 bt. lSS I * Cincinnati S:10 a. ra. 4:14 P. M.-rto. a, DAILY Makes all T^fOAKD AlL LlNv; tlAIL* a". *" Arrive Front- i Depart Tw- ton '” amltlrmlngham.. 0*0 am Abbeville 3:40 ainlMotiitM 7;a, nR1 Memphis 11:44 sin New York....13.00 £ Now York i:») puiiAlilierltla.... 4:00 put Monroe. .. .. 7:40 pmIMemphls 4:00 pm “ :W w Stopa Local to Heflin: arrives Ifedlo 10*1 „»*» P.. M^-Sa. *7. DAILY.—Through ’. it- «• "LJ Marlillan II a. m.t Jackson i-ja p. a: Yirfcslturg. 4*4 p. m.: Bhrareport Mas 1*0*0 receive passengers u RitlllT-Niv as. DAILY.r-Dalted stall-, 4ast sran. Sotld vetttiimia. trsls. Sire pi ns ears In ,New ork. Illcbmond. Charlotte and Asheville. Coaches to Wsshlngtnm UtaTig rent seres all meals ea rente. Arrive, T^.A^nrrT^ev’^Sp.'r' Tick-* Ofrir* No. 1 iVjirMntv on nniloet. Bath Phnn***. Clt» offW. |f2 uMli; No. Z. ud Teralual railroad schedules. I bhouiug ttj. ArrJcsi ant Departure itf i*of settger Tntlus at the FntloVing itnn.la: WKSlKItN- AND ATLANTIC UAll.ltUAu. V® 'r. A, ; , vo From— No.-Depart To— • Nashville.. 7:10 on • i Nash rills. 4*4 •« 5 ysrlett*... 4:27 sin 74 Msrtstts..li.W P™ iy Nn«hrlll,..H:a mu f K Nsihvllls.4:IO pm pm ’73 MsristtSe 4:» P® IUU • 4 Nashville. S:M I'M ” ^.hvul;: f I CL’m'IIAIg or Uls'UKilU UAII.WAYs . Arriy* From- Savanuab..... 7:lt am J«cksouyflle M 7JO an Macon....... Hovannab .... 4:JS pm Macou |;0Q pm Depart To- juicon .a* "r figagEJnsls ATLANTA AN'D^W^gT POINT BAIL- —.Arrtvn From- I Depart To- gstesy-ifg ss If* ‘.1 Attanln sad Wet “if. _ . ■ Railroad Company arrive .at a— - Cjy®. Atlanta Terminal station, eorm Mllehell street nnd Madison arcane, , tlktllttilA llilUtUAD. .. Arrive From- Depart To-. _ *Augnotn...„. 4*0 am 'Ancnstn 7:43 am ConyevSu 4:3 am Mthonls.... .»•* ,m Covington..... 7.44 am'Augusts...— I:fi I" itjruam.. . .«:» pm Cooyere I 4:k put tkonln J O pm Covington.... *:W pm A'txustg 1:13 pm 'Angnsts.. ...U:* P“ . 'Dally. AU other trains dally except *“«• day.