.sleJl Wffe Vg> y free. \lo rexxifure /uvdlS^ J) 112 W Tftpu zaithz eWof oiker Ifuilumecf mftj/ so'Mrvp*\ Whou sh r .dtfs[ ||jy otv eit tk^ ly "tkszsi rxvor^ Jh j?lorioiis I'reajt. Mk dEkiS&P but le morning broke in sparkling sunshine — !rlike a white burst of spray from a dark. bellowing wave. The ring of an ax cut through the twitter of birds, fnd the throbbing notes of a meado- / lark's song. On the edge of the clo&ring where Heath cot had built his log cabin, a young pine had been ripped up by the roots, and in swift flashes, catching the light as it rose and fell, his ax was denud ing the trunk of all branches except two upper ones which on either side extended an outstretched arm. Any other settler would have seen in the fallen tree only so many cords of firewood, but in every crude incident of frontier life Heathcot beheld an in ner, spiritual meaning—saw in the pine felled by the wind a Heaven-giv en cross for his Easter standard when he should preach his great revival ser mon on the morrow. The blood leaped in liis veins as he swung his ax with tireless energy, and thoughts leaped to his brain in a rising torrent of religious fervor. Standing by the compelling form of the cross rough-liewn from their own forests by the hand of their own prophet he would speak to his people a word of power such as he had never spoken before —not even in his old church baok in . A sudden transformation swept over the zealot's face. The angel had fled and left only the man, the primitive man with fierce, elemental love, jeal ousy, hate. Crimson surged in his cheeks; his eyes blazed. The ax rose and fell, physical la bor beating into repression the stress of his passion. But while he chopped, cut, trimmed, while he and tiie helpers summoned from the settlement bore the cross through the woods and planted it at the head of the plaza, the sense of disgrace that had ruined his career and driven him into the wilderness still goaded his soul, for his home life had been a house upon the hilltop, its betrayed honor mocked at by every little dweller of the valley. And on the following day when the settlers from far and near cabins gath ered in the plaza, and Heathcot rose from his knees and stood beside the great pine cross to preach his Easter sermon, unconsciously it was the spark of personal anger that lighted his flaming denunciation of evil. It was a dramatic scene. Above, a dull, gray sky, weighed low with heavy clouds; liuddiing on both sides and at the lower end of the plaza, the rude shacks of the Settlement high-walled beyond by the trees of the surround ing forest; at the upper end a sweep of open country stretching green to the horizon. The cross of pine planted at this end lifted its clear-cut strength against the background of the sky. Equally strong stood out the frontier preacher in his top boots, his cordu roys, his crimson sweater, likewise strong in bearing the men and women of his congregation who had left the marie ways of pleasantness and peace to blaze a new trail in history. Only a man lik<; Heathcot, who lived and labored and fought with them, side by side, shoulder to shoulder, could have touched them, quickened the spiritual within, and the vision of power that had flashed before h!:n while he was hewing the cross the day before was fulfilled. Wlieu ha had finished speaking, tears swept the cheeks of those who dry-eyed had faced privation, loss, death itself; those who had feared neither God nor devil were on their knees; and out from among them stole a woman ol sin and threw her sobbing form at the foot of the cross. As the others watched her, a hush of awe fell upon them, and breathless ly they waited for Heathcot to hurl the lashes of righteous wrath that should scourge her soul to fuller re pentance. For a moment he stood motionless, his face now white, tense, ablaze with a scathing light from his wonderful eyes. Then as though drawn by a magnet ho turned toward the cross, the trunk of the tall straight pine pointing sternly upward, two branches extending like arms outstretched in pleading. He stooped to the prostrate woman, bent over her, speaking in a low, hur ried voice; lifted her to her feet. "My people," he said in a tone of In finite sweetness, "I have a new word He Drew the Shrinking Woman to Him. to give you. God is—love." He drew the shrinking woman to his side. "I cannot preach longer to you to-day, for I have found my wife—who was lost —and we must go home together." Easter in Italy. The boys and girls of this sunny land spend Easter morning in church. If they live in or near Rome they will surely goto St. Peter's, the largest church in the world. There they see thousands of lighted candles, altars covWed with lovely flowers, and to their ears wonderful music softly floats. After the service is over the whole congregation pours out onto j the sViare facing the church, and I turning"iooks up at a balcony over | the midine doorway. Here a figure is | seen dressed in beautiful robes. It Is | th-a pope. As he rises and lifts hia i hand thousands of head 3 bow to re | ce've his solemn Easter blessing.— Exchange. CAMERON COUNTY PRESS, THURSDAY APRIL 8, 1909. Across the world his mPssfiKf rings, And, hearing it, men cease a while To madly strive for worldly things Or cling to longings that are vile. And, having wrought for good or ill. Pay lo "ing tribute to liim still. Wherever slender steeples rise, Wherever mellow chimes are heard The love he taught still sanctifies. The nobler passions still are stirred; By every friendly look and thought We spread the message that lie brought. If by to-morrow men forget For hirn the anthems rise to-day; The cross is sacred, for him, yet. And still its shadow marks the way, - =■ The Christian 3 Festival of " Easter BSSfSBF ALL the holidays in the year Christmas and Easter stand more prominently on t ' le P a se of history than any others. Throughout all the mutations and vicissitudes that have entered into tlie world's history during the past two thousand years the two fes tivals that commemorate respectively the birth and the resurrection of the Man of Nazareth still shine with a Ins- ter that remains unfaded after the lapse of two centuries. The Christian festival of Easter is not only a celebration of great an tiquity, but many of its popular ob servances are clearly of pagan origin. In northern Germany the ancient Teu tons were accustomed to celebrate the feast of the Goddess Ostara, who was the personification of morning, or the east, and also of the opening year, or spring. This custom continued to be observed down to the beginning of the present century. The pagan rites in stituted by the Germans were brought into England by the Saxons, and un der the name of Easter the Teuton di vinity was honored by the Anglo-Sax ons with joy and feasting about the same season of the year that the Christian Easter festival arrives. It was about the year 68 A. D. that the formal institution of the celebra tion of the day by Christians took place. To the followers of the Risen Lord the heathen season of rejoicing at the rising of the natural sun and the awakening of nature at the death of winter waa easily suggestive of joy at the rising of the Son of Righteous ness—the resurrection of Christ from the tomb. It also followed as a natural result that the devout adherents of the Christ in their reverence for the day upon which was performed the greatest and most sublime of miracles should continue to set it apart each week as a day for divine worship, to the utter exclusion of the Sabbath of the Decalogue. The rites and ceremonies that char acterize the celebration of the Easter festival, although modified somewhat In this age, still retain many of the features that marked it in earlier years. In the early church the cere monies lasted eight days. Courts of justice were closed itnd aims were dis pensed in the churches to the poor and needy. Popular sports, farcical exhibitions and dancing were indulged in. These lat*er frivolities, however, were abolished by the reformers of the sixteenth century. Our Anglo-Saxon ancestors held daily services in the churches from Palm Sunday to the be ginning of the Easter festival. People saluted each other with the Easter kiss and the words "Ex Surrexit" (He has risen), to which greeting the reply "Vere Surrexit" (He is risen indeed). The chief solemnity of the occasion was the celebration of the Lord's sup per. In Russia Easter Sunday is a holi day that exceeds ail others. At mid night of Saturday a metropolitan or priest, preceded by a cross-bearer and boy bearing holy water, vessels and candles, and followed by a solemn pro cession, issues from the church and going round the wall sprinkles it with holy water. lie then pronounces a benediction upon thousands of large, round, gilded leaves, pyramids of but ter with palms stuck in them, and eggs in great quantities. This cere mony signals the close of Lent, and ushers in Easter Sunday. Joyiiii voices of the faithful are heard crying out: "Christos vor Chris" (Christ is risen) and the response: "He is risen indeed." The kiss upon either cheek is then given by all; this salute being given arid received by emperor aud serf alike. Electric Lighted Easter Eggs. The very newest thing in Easter •»ggs is to be seen in the toy shops these days, consisting of an enlarged reproduction of the ordinary hen fruit with a tiny electric light apparatus concealed somewhere inside it. There is a peep-hole at one end, and as you put your eye to it you press a button. Then the interior of the shell is flood ed with light, showing a scene of more or less brilliancy and gayety. oooooooooooooooooooocooooo I 8 Processional $> 3> 1 «> to Calvary | (From Stalner'a Oratorio, "Crucifixion.") 0 Tlina wide the gatest for the Savior X waits © Co tread in Bis royal way* 8 Re has come from above; in bis 0 power and love 5 to die cn this Passion day. o Bis cross is the sign of a love divine. § Bis crown is the thorn-wreath 6 of woe. g I Be bears Bis load on the sorrowful q road 9 And bends 'neatb the burden low. 5 Bow sweet is the grace of Bis sacred § face 5 Jlnd lovely beyond compare 9 Chough weary and worn, with the X merciless scorn Q Of a world Be has come to spare. X Cbe burden of wrong that eartb Q bears along, X Past evil, and evil to be ; o Jill sins of man since the world x began, © Chey have laid, dear Cord, on thee. § Chen onto the end, my 6od and my Q Triend, 5 With Chy banner lifted high! 0 Chou art come from above, in Chy § power and love o Co endure and suffer and diet R 00000000000000000000000000 11 Woman and 1 I the I □ Life Festival ffW/jflftaWßl.V THE dim childhood fiyj of the ' iunian race . man . not woman, was nia(^e cent;ra ' fig much that celebrated triumphs of life over death, the conquests of mankind over the foes that beset and menaced the highest but not the strongest of the animals. Fatherhood was honored more than motherhood, in some parts of the crude, young world, and the pa triarchal head of the family quite eclipsed his mate or mates in such dis tinction as came from obedience to the injunction to "be fruitful and mul tiply and replenish the earth." It is different now. In this stage of the world's development the festival of the renewing and reawakening of life is mainly feminine, notwithstand ing the fact that it. celebrates the res uerrection of the Son of Man. Women, not men, make of Easter the great spectacle and day of rejoicing which it has become in nearly all parts of the Christian world. Women pre dominate in the churches. Women give the Easter streets their glow of color and wealth of charm. The world understands now, if it did not long ago, that woman is the high priestess of the temple of life. She is the mother, the nurse, the guardian angel of childhood. She is the teacher, the comforter, the home builder. She takes few lives and saves many. She risks her own life that others may live. Woman earns her primacy in the great festival of the year's new birth. In the realm of the spirit, also, woman is the priestess of life. She is the embodiment, in a higher degree than man, of the hope of the race, the buoyancy and faith of the soul, the op timism of trust in the reign of good and the triumph of life over death. She has more of the resurrection spirit than man. It is for this reason, quite as much as because of woman's grace and charm and song and laughter, that she fits so pre-eminently the Easter environment. She has the spirit and mental outlook of spring. She re sponds more sensitively and joyously than man to the re-awakening of life on the earth, the bursting of buds, the unfolding of little leaves, the quicken ing of forest and orchard, field and garden. It is easier for woman to believe than for man, easier for her to feel and thrill to the appeal of the resur rection. She enters more intensely than man into the very heart and soul of the Easter story. And the spirit that accepts most unreservedly and gladly Easter's religious and his toric meaning is the spirit which is best attuned to the springy glory of the world. The difference is clearly marked early in life. Easter is far more to the girl than to the boy. The former, not the latter, finds that the day appeals to her strongly before she understands much of its signilioance. The bill's interest is narrower, less certain, less hearty. He is out of touch with much that his sister feels in the Easter cere monies and the Easter customs. From infancy to old age, therefore, the spring festival is distinctively a woman's festival. It is feminine in outward beauty and charm. It is femi nine, also, in the inner grace of the heart that feels and the spirit that be lieves in the reign of good and the un ending triumphs of life over death, the cradle ever the grave, the new over tli© old, the soul over the mortal body. A grateful man never has to look into his pocketl>ook to see how much he has to be thankful for. S Tht Piatt t« Bar S 5 J. F. PARSONS' ? RHEUMATISM LUMBteO, SCIATICA NEURALGIA and KIDNEY TROUBLE "MHOPS" taken internally, rids the blood of the poisonous matter and adds which are the dlreot causes of these diseases. Applied externally it affords almost In stant relief from pain, while a permanent oure la being effected by purifying the blood, dissolving the polaonous sub stanoe and removing it from the system. DR. 8. D. BLAND Of Brewton, Oft., write*: •'I bad been * inffertr for a nnmbsr of yetn with Lumbago and Rheumatism ID MY anna MR and legs, and tried all theremedlea tbat I could W gather from medical works, and alaooooaulted 881 with a number of the boat phvalolana. but found WM nothing that gare (he relief ohulned from Bj M 6-DROPB." I ahall prsecrlbe It In my praotloe Bj tor rheumatism and kindred diseases.'' - FREE! If you are suffering with Rheumatism, K Neuralgia, Kidney Trouble or any kin- H dred disease, write to us for a trial bottle V of "t-DROPS." end test it yourself. "8-DROPS" can be used any length of H time without aoqulrlnff a "drug habit." Bj as It Is entirely free of opium, oocaine, ■ alcohol, laudanum, and other aimllarKft ingredients. Largaßlae Bottle, "B-DHOPH" (80» DhU) ggj •1,00. rwititbrOnniiu. 6WARSOB IHEDIRATIO SORE 60MPAIY fl Uept. SO. ISO Lake ItiMt, CUow f HJ —r ff ff -i ffm m M Gives yon ths reading matter in m oJ© V 112 OfffC which you have the greatest in ■ !■■■■ —. terest —the homo news. Its every issue will provo a welcome visitor to every member of the family- It should head your list of newspaper and periodical subscriptions. ' G.SCHMIDT'S,^ —__hradquarters for fresh BREAD, Sgi POt) (Iter FANCY CAKES, (QjSi P ICE CREAM, / CONFECTIONERY Daily Delivery. All orders given prompt and skillful attention. I Enlarging Your Business If you are in annually, and then carefully business and you note the effect it has in in* Wtk want to make creasing your volume of busi« | wML more money you ness; whether a io, 20 or 30 s*'; will read every P« r cent increase. If you word we have to watch this gain from year to say. Are you 7 ou w ''l become intensely in n lal spending your terested in your advertising, Jh «9 money for ad- and how you can make it en wil vertising in hap- large your business. Kg CT hazard fashion If you try this method wo 'fife as if intended believe you will not want to for charity, or do you adver- let a single issue of this paper tise for direct results? goto press without something Did you ever stop to think from your store, how your advertising can be w '" pleased to have made a source of profit to y° u ca '' on us > an< * we you, and how its value can be take pleasure in explaining measured in dollars and our at 'nual >. on tract for so cents. 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If you are not get ting your share of the business of your community there's a reason. People go where they arc attracted where they ' know what they can get and how much it is sold for. If you make direct statements in your advertising see to it that you are able to fulfill every promise you make. You will add to your business reputa tion and hold your customers. It will not cost as much to run your ad in this paper as you think. It is the persistent ad vertiser who gets there. Have something in the paper every issue, no matter how small. We will be pleased to quote you our advertising rates, par ticularly on the year's busi ness. MAKITYOUR APPEAL A to the public through the MZ columns of this paper. With every issue it carries % its message into the homes M and lives of the people. Your competitor has his store news in this issue. Why don't you have yours? Don't blame the people for flocking to his store. Thev know what he has. 3