Ee EE————— ovation. d corrupt spoken by sides Ger- stance of writer in Jerusalem dencunced rerse with 0 Jew,” he know the red that cunage and vy to speak Tr was: ‘I ewfangled in Jerusa, erests, smen are ces of the th Ameri- They are ter what or what exchanges elephant > product converti- mm odd to en, carry- American nin the of Zanzi- nuts come ise of tlie eater the ec and sta- oduct and ts various hip. Marshall, jends “to the world. ten from ther com- e ‘shown. inches in i% combed fully © four y it folded is vest.— irector of s has just large lead he largest 4-drachma. under the be in such 11d appear irculation. SORE leep—Torty n Dociors ed by aby’s face, overed her boils, hav- time, and kin started i che coula ne month's and Umnt- Joctors and with baby t iess than (Signed) Greeusicid ls. : in your net thrust the same ylood ves- at once ue. They er wreck » skin and agerly ab- luster op- 'S matter into the to pile around it ags about ey gradu- lidify into h appears b. They repairing ine, 1. catherford year who ons that in. life. Joe heme is in have any ned to go picked up valked the » Weather- ed that he - he could board, and e received his way rs old, but ort of job nsas City; rt Better.” 1an a geld 1se Grape- aver had a rh of the g. the very . gave me rue of pre- all (except digestible, ch (which nd various ctherwisc und easily 1 it has re- and made catarrh of »d entirely thanks te my almost ” Name tle Creek, " fhe Lory. el THE PULPIT, A SCHOLARLY SUNDAY SERMON BY .DR. LOUIS ALBERT BANKS. Subject: The Compassion of Christ. Brooklyn, N. Y.—Dr. Louis Albert Banks, at one time pastor of the Han- son Place M. E. Church, where he was most successful, preached there Sun- day morning on *‘The Christ Who is Touched With the Feeling of Our In- firmities.”” The text was from He- brews iv:15. “We have not a high priest which cannot be touched with the feeling of our infirmities, but was in all points tempted as we are, yet without sin.” Dr. Banks said: “The last part of this text explains the first. Christ is in sensitive touch with us in the temptations and trials of life because He has personally ex- perienced them. He is not a stranger standing off on the ramparts of heav- en, looking down,’ though it be ever so 'benevolently, upon sorrows and dif- ficulties which He has never person- ally known. Such compassion could not mean much to us. But Jesus Christ perfected Himself as the cap- tain of our salvation through suffering. For three and thivty years He wore our flesh, and tasted our grief, and He. is touched with the feeling of our in-, firmities. How nruch that ought to mean to us. When we-are in any trial or trouble, and we need comfort, it is not to the most-joyo have neyer known what sorrow was, to whom we go for sympathy. « “Some years ago I was surprised to receive from a very rich man in a city where I was then pastor a check for a large sum of money which he said he wished me to.use among the poor in my part of the city, and especially among children who were having a hard time of.it. I followed his direc= tions and gave him an account of how portions of it were used. Still other sums followed until I was véry much interested.’in the matter, and won- dered not a little at the cause of it. {After it had gone on for nearly a year I received a letter from him inviting me to take lunch with him at a hotel. When we met he said: ‘I suppose you. have wondered at- my sending this money to’ you; an entire stranger to me, and at my being so much interest- ed in the children of the poor in your section of the gity. But this is how it comes. . My father died when I was a very little boy. .My mother was left a widow with a large family of chil- dren, all of whom were too small to be of much help. She had to work very hard, but work as hard as she could, she was unable to procure enough food and clothing to give us comfort all the time. For two or three years I knew what it was to be hungry. Many-a night I have cried myself to sleep in silence lest my mother should hear and it should make her feel bad, because I was so hungry. I could not keep back the tears, and I knew she had no bread to give me. You would scarcely believe it,’ con- tinued the millionaire, ‘looking at me ‘now and knowing what you do of me that on mor> than one occasion. I have run and snatched a crust of bread thrown away from a wagon where some teamster had eaten his lunch,. and rescued it from.a dog, and sat down -and ate it gratefully, and washed it down ‘with a drink from the town pump.” Then the tears came into the big man’s eye and one rolled out on his cheek as he said: ‘Now you know .why I have so much sympathy for the poor children. -It makes me shiver on a cold night when I think of the bays and girls who have not