PLATTSMOUTH SEMI-WEEKLY JOUENAE. PAGE S. THURSDAY, MAY- 27, 1113. . The Holy Spirit to Be Poured Out Upon AI! Flash. The Divine Plan Provides Tvo Distinct Salvations The First Pentecost Its Blessings For the Church Exclusively. Its Work Nearly Completed The Second Pentecost Its Blessings For the World In General Coming Through the Messianic Kingdom. Operating Through Israel Restored. A Thousand Years of Blessing. Fan Antonio. Texas. May V3 Pastor li u s s e 1 1 ' spoke here today on the text, "Aii.l : it shall come to 1 pass nfterwar 1 i that I wil pour out My Spirit up- J on all Ih-sh." i.Ioel I V v. i 1 :!.".) He said in 1 a it : The 1'rophet Joel mentions t'o dis ficT-n i-'iivcrii tinct outpourings of the Holy Spirit, tine of these, upon the servants and the handmaidens, .found its fuiti'mcnt at I'enteco.-t; an I durii.i: the more than eighteen centu ries since then. GJ"s spiritual bh s i;jg h:.s been with all the foil step fol lowers of" Jesus all f iod"s servants and handmaidens. If we sec this fea ture of the prophecy t'ullilled. it be comes a guarantee to be:itvers that the remainder of the same prophecy ui!i hae fullilmei.t in God's due time. The remainder of the pro ht"-y de clares that afterward after those days during which the i'oly Spirit has been outp'.ure.l upon the Church, upon the "servants and handmaidens' w.ll come- God's time for poii.ing out IDs Sl'iiit upon all the world of mankind. After These Days !"essiah's Kingdom. St. Peter's explanation of the I'enie costal blessing. "This is that which was spoken ly the I'ropLet Joe!." should not be taken to mean that what was witnessed in the upper r"iii on the Day of lVnu-co.-i. iie:.ri nineteen centuries ago, c-ompictely i'u.Iiiied the l'H'phet Joel's predi' tious. (Acts ': to. - i'.ible student Would di.s- u'.e that toe fn'.tiimeut of tlie prophecy began at IVnte'ost. with the early t'hur-li. and has been in j tie-ess of fulU.inviit during ail the centuries sim-e. It is as true today us it was then, that the bussing of the Holy Si'irit is granted to all of God's ser vants and handmaidens; and the re ja.i.ii b r of the prophecy v,A be ful filled with equal accuracy in due time. Alter these days of the Gosjh'1 Age after these days of the outl oiiring of the Spirit upon God's sen ants and handmaidens will come tlie glorious epoch of iJessiiih's" Kingdom, in and through whi' h Go 1 will pour out upon the .oTd of mankind a great biessing of eioighicnm.-nt and uplift from the s-iu and death conditions whi"h now prevail. It wi'd be to tlie accomplish inent of this end that Satan shall be bound for a th'j'.'s.v.id years; and tiie darkness which now covers the earth, riid the gross darkness wiich now b'inds the heathen, will be chased away by the glorious "Sun of J"iirl. teousnes.s with he:li!,g in UN r.eams." Mai. 4:2. Th'.s will be inaugurated the gloiiou.s I ay of Messiah, a thousand years long. Tims the knowledge of the gl jry of the l.o:-d will fill the whole ear:h. Thus very tongue shall be brought to con fess and every knee to bow to Messiah u the great llepresentative of Jehovah and His righteousness. Isaiah 11:1; I'hilipi.ians 2:'.t 11. Abraham's Spiritual Seed First. Abraham of old typified Jehovah and Isaac typified Messiah. ln.ru not after the Mesh, but aft -r the Sprit by a special Dpiue interposition according t promise of God. or this ami ty!. i al Isaac class .b'sus is tlie Head, the l-'.irerunncr of the Churca. as well . fii. world's Kedeemer. The I'.ody of Messiah is composed of n saintly few. according to the Scriptures, gath-c-"d primarily from the Jews, but be- in'. co'apiet d by a lditloTis from every ;;, nation, kindred .!! tongue. 'J'les,. all. St. I'aul tells o. will be 'lai'acter-copies of Gori's d. : Son. our I'cdeemer Bttd Head. This the Apostle ! I' : : I1:' !!( les' inat'e-n l:.:n::i.s S;g:i. It'i; ;al. -ill's, pt. This Church class, or Me-k5ah class, is variously referred to in t Ik p:o 1 hecies. as well as in the N'l'W Testa ment, as the brethren of Jesus jind as sons of God. Of them the Prophet David writes. "1 have sail"!. Ye are god--: and all of you are children of the Mo-t High; but ye -sh;;!! all die like men. and fall like One of the princes." (I'salm MM. 7.) Those all die men in the estimation of the v-irid: for. as St. John declares, the voi Id knowcth them not, even as it knew nt their Master. (1 John 5:1.) As t'i" world did not ro.-ouis'e that the life of Jesus was la i 1 down sr crificiaily. neither N it aware that the followers f Jesjs. a little handful, down through the Gospel Age. have Hkewis-e through His merit presented their bodies a liv ing sacrifice, holy rnd acceptable to ; 1.- Humans HM. Abraham's Nrtural Seed Next. This Spiritual Seed of biah:im. nil r lintiy. will constitute the ' 'hurch of I he i'ir si-iio! ns. tiie ::iiTiiye "f the Priests an! the Levitt's of the Jewish Dispensation. With the completion of this Church, gathered out of all na- tions. sects and deuoiuiuat.ous. Divine favor will njraiu return to tlie natural seed of Abraham. As the Jew was granted the hrr't opportunity or privi lege of becoming the Spiritual Need of Abraham, he will likewise have the first opportunity to participate in the blessing which will then come to the whole world of mankind. "To the Jew first" is the livine order in respect to both of these blessings. To this agree the words of the j Apostle l'aul. After telling of the i Divine election of the Church, the j saintly few of loth Jews and Gentiles, t the Apostle anhls. "1 would not. brethren, that ye should be ignorant com ernliig this mystery, lest ye should be vise in your own coix-tits. that blindness in part only, not perpetual is happened to Israel, until the fulness of the Ieiitiles be come in." When the full, elect Spiritual Si-ed shall have been gathered, shall have been com pleted from amongst the Gentiles, then til X.iti: rhl Israel shall be saved from their blindness fml their outcast con dition. Itoimins 11 -M Lit. St. Paul jxdnts out that as Israel's stumbling was directly foretold through the Prophet (I'salm 0b:22. so also through the Prophets Cod JciS foretold their blessing later on that they shall be the first to be blessed under the glorious Spiritual Messiah of many members. Thus it is writ ten. "There shall come out of Z'.on tlie Deliverer, and shall turn away un godliness from Jacob." Here Zion is pi tured as a mother whose offspring is The Messiah. Looking again at th ty"e. v. e see that Abraham represented Jehovah, and that his wire Sarah rep resented the great Coverant through whi.-h Messiah was to be deve!opd "In thy Seed shall all tlie families of the earth be blessed"; "If ye It Christ's, then are ye Abraham's Seed. and heirs according to the Promise." j I'omaus 11 : 11 ; Genesis ir':17. 1: Ga -j l.iti.ins 5:S. Id, -J'J. ' i It has required more than eighteen i centuries to give birth to this great Deliverer. Jesus was the Head: and the Church, developed during this Gos j pel Age. will be the llody. Jesus wa- j "the First-born from the deal": and1 the Church. His members, will le His ! brethren, sharers in His rule on the ' Heavenly plane: for is He not declar- ed to be "the First-liorn among many ! brethren"? (I'omaus S'fi.) The First or -Chief Kesurrectiou v ill bring al.j these sons of God to the plane oJ glory, honor and immortality born from the dead. Then the great Deliv erer will le fully lorn. and ready t lM-'dn His great work of bles:i.g all the nations Israel being the first o! j these. j "My Spirit Upon All Flesh." j St. Peter declares that it was the j glorified Jesus who received the Holy i Spirit of the Father and poured it out upon the Church at Pentecost (Acts ::o.'I.i That blessing came to the Church ltecause of their coming into harmony with the Fathers ar rangement through the Son. The re ceiving of the Spirit there marked tht recipients as sous of God. The later Pentecostal blessing upon the world will have points of similar Py as well hs points of difference. The blessing will come through the gnat Messiah as a result of the satisfaction which He will make for the sins of the w hole world by applying to the raci the merits of His sacrifice. Thus Hi will seal the .New La w Covenant with Israel, and then with the workl j through Israel. (Jeremiah i:.i-o-t. The great Messiah of glory will be tht Mediator of that New Covenant; ami the foundation of that New Covenant will be the "better sacrifices' offered by this Mediator, as the antitypka! Iligh Priest. Hebrews !:1!-S. The Pentecostal blessing then t come upon the world will not be upoi; the terms of their .sacrificing then earthly rights to attain Heavenly blessing and spiritual souship. On th contrary, its requirements will be n consecration to obedience of the Di vine Law: and its reward will be earthly Institution to the erfectioi; of human nature and to the eiijoyineni of all the blessings originally given tc Adam, but forfeited by his disobedi ence. "They shall build houses ami inhabit them. They shall plant vine yards and eat the fruit thereof." ami "long enjoy the work of their hands.' i Isaiah Vrhl. g-) This is the Di vim promise, applicable ti mankind, bill not to the Spiritual Seed of Abraham the Church, tlie Kingdom class, win must ell be changed: for "llesh and blood cannot inherit the Kingdom ot God." 1 Corinthians lo:SO. As Jacob was a son of Abraham, not directly, but through Isaac, so als those blessed under Messiah's Ileigi will be children of God. not direct ly "out through Messiah. Thus it is writ ten or Messiah. "He shall be cal!e: Wonderful. Counselor, tlie .Mighty One the Prince of Peace, the Everlastinc Father" the Father, or Dife-giver to the restored world of mankind (Isaiah 7.) The life which lie laid down in sacrifice the earthly lif -is that which He will give to all tin willing and oledient of Adam's race during His Messianic Kingdom to b theirs forever. It is in this sene that He will be the Everlasting Father the Father who gives everlasting life which Adam failed to give. Messial Himself will have no need for tin earthly life which He laid down; foi as a reward for His oledien-e tin neavenly Father has given Him thr higher life the Divine nature. The Fathers to Be Princes. From of old Abraham. Isaac. Jacob David, etc.. were called the fathers not only because of their relations!! to the Jewish nation, but particularly because Messiah was to come as thei; offspring "the Seed of Abraham." "of the tem of Jesse." "the Offspring ol David": and to Jesus was born of this very lineage. Rut nis exaltation by the Father to the spirit plane, and the fact that His earthly rights laid down iu sacrifice are to go to Adam and all of his race who will accept the same on the Divine terms, puts Jesus in the position of Father. Life giver, to the world, including Abra ham, David, etc. They must all ob tain everlasting life through Him. and hence will be His children. Thus the Prophet David wrote of the future, "instead of Thy fathers shall be Thy children, whom Thou inayest make princes iu ull the earth." (Psalm 4j:10.) Those fathers who are to be princes are already declared to have been pleasing to God. Tiny attested their loyalty by a faith which worked in harmony with His will through the limitations of a fallen nature. The Fathers' "Better Resurrection." On account of this the fathers are al ready declared to be worthy of a bet ter resurrection' than the remainder of mankind but not so glorious a resurrection ns will be granted to the Church. Their resurrection will be to the perfection . of human nature mental, moral and physical. Thus they will stand before mankind as sr.mples of human perfection, to w hi. h stand ard, all the race may attain by obedi ence, if they will, during the thousand years of Messiah's 2'eign. Those Ancient Worthies (Hebrews 111 will not only be illustrations of human perfection, but princes, or rulers, in all the earth. They will be the outward and visible representa tives of the invisible Messiah the agents through whom the Word of the Ird will go forth. As it is written. "Out of Zion the Spiritual Kingdom 1 shall go forth the Law. and the Word of the Lord from Jerusalem" the earthly manifestation of the Kingdom amongst men. Isaiah As a reult of the second outpouring of the Holy Spirit. the Prophet Joel to our Common declares, according Version. "Your sons and your daugh ters shall prophesy, your old men shall dream dreams, your young men shall pj-e visions." A preferred translation of this heretofore obscure passage reads. "Your young men in that New Dispensation will seeAvith clear vision what your Ancients dreamed of and re. lated in parables." This vision of glory will be the Reign of Righteous ness and the Pentecostal blessing ac companying it. upon the willing and obedient, every one of whom shall be brought to clear knowledge and full opportunity for salvation. Order of the Blessing. The order of the blesslr.g Is stnted. It will come upon all th sh nftrr th s days, but upon the servants an 1 th handmaidens i.'i those days. The day mentioned evidently refer to this Gos pel Age from Pentecost to the Fe--ond Coining of Christ. During this period, now nearly nineteen centuries. God's Holy Spirit has been granted to I! is faithful ones, and to these alone. Only the fully consecrated have Ihmui ac cepted of the Lord as living sacrifice--; and only such have been begotten of the Holy Spirit, that they may be New Creatures in Christ. t'2 Corinthi-ms r:17.) During all this time the word has been unrecognized, so far as the Holy Spirit is concerned. Indeed, after Pentecost the Apostle John went still further and declar. d. "The whole world lh'th iu 'ke Wick -l One." The only action of the Ho'y Spirit has been, as in the case of Felix, to '"reprove the world of sin, and of righteousness, and of judgment." (John 10:7-13 ; Acts 11:2.1.) Our text dec!:1. res, however, that the time is coming when the world will receive a share of the great Divine blessing which was fully assured by the death of Christ. P.at its time of favor will be ''after those days" after this Gospel Age shall have come to an end; after the New Dispen sation shall have begun. "To the Jew First." Only Jews received the first Pente costal blessing. For three : nil one half years thereafter the Gentiles were excluded, in harmony with a Divine promise made to the Jewish nation. Then came the time for a similar privi lege to be extended to tin? ("entiles. I rejoice with you today, fellow-students of the Word of God. that this great gift of Cod is still obtainable, that the time has not yet fully come when the door of opportunity to this High Calling must close. Close it will, so soon as the full number of the Fleet shall have been completed. Thank God that another door will then open! the door of Restitution tj human jterfec tion and earthly life, grand leynd the power of description. Then God's Holy Spirit holy power will through Christ be outpoured upon all llesh upon all mankind. Mes siah will inaugurate the New Dispell nation by sealing with Israel the New Covenant in His blood; as through the Apostle Paul the Iord declares. "This is My Covenant with them when 1 shall take away their sins. As con cerning the Gos'K'l. they are enemies for your sakes; but as touching the Flection, they are beloved for the fa thers' sakes." Romans 11:27, L'S. This outpouring of the Holy Spirit is not merely for Israel, nor is God s blessing merely upon Abraham's natu ral seed outside of the Church class. It will include all of every nation de sirous of coming into accord with God. after they shall have come to a clear knowledge of the Truth. All nation; shall be privileged to enter into and enjoy Israel's great Covenant, by lie coming children of Abraham through faith. After all rejectors of God's grace shall have been destroyed in the Second Death, the world of mankind will constitute the promised "seed of Abraham." whose number shall Ik as the sand of the seashore, even as the spirit-begotten ones of this Gospel Age are likened to the stars or heaven. Thenceforth every creature in Heaven and on earth will acclaim honor to nim that sitteth upon the Throne and unto the Lamb forever. FAREWELL 10 TIIE GRADUATES OF 1815 WEDNESDAY M6H1 Opera House Filled to Overflowing and Senator If itciiro-. k's Oration One of the Finest lAer De livered in This City. Lust evening at the Pameie thea ter, before a bou'-e fllSe I to its utmost capacity willi fi ienils -..'d icu'iives of the young people, th- ji :i-!uat ing cias.-; of I'.'I-" of the PL.tl-mouth High school bade farewell 10 their life in the old school house on tin? hill, iinJ an orraniu!ln pn--td iv.'o mem ory, and the member s of the cla.-s stepped forth into the world to take up their duties and life as citizens cf this great country. The claxs, some twenty-seven in number, garbed in tlie cup and gown of graduation, were seated on the i-.tage, together with the superir tend er! t atvJ member1-- of the family, and each of the graduate- wore a large Am'--ric:in Iieauty rose, the flower adopted by the class of 2!1." as- their flower. The invocation v.;:.-- j.ionojneeil by Rev. Wilbur S. Leeie. rector of St. Luke's Episcopal church, and a.s the minister called down the blessings up "Ti the young people and those who had assisted them in securing their education, as well as the speaker of the evening", the viist audience ftit deeply the impressive!. ess of the oc casion, which marked an important step in the live1-- of "the graduates in wj cm they were co greatly Intercste:l. The class had selected Mr. William T. Richardson, jr., as the salututorian, and the your.?: man fave to the cla: anJ the au.iicr.ee an address, while it v a? brief, that was fi-led wnh rich ard splendid thought' that they will a;ry with them in tneir future lives. Th? subject was taker: from the clas? rv t'o. "Tiie Pa.-:t Forever Ge ne, the FuVai e Still Our Ov-:." ami in this the sper.k.'i- pointed out tlie va'.ui.' of '.he good "k1 l.i":ier ideals of life, the r.ecc'-s'ty of making time p.-cve of value, and not to wa-le the pri-rious minutes and hours of F.fo in idleness and ease, but to strive for th-ir own advancement, as well as that of their fellow man. Mr. Richardson was very clear in his statements ami his re marks carried home to the class a sti.se of t;.e duiies that they owe to themselves, as well as to the world in which thev are now to become a factor. y wii'f.' l o t the salutatory Miss;fi of the t3 Kathryn Agr.es Tor! talented members cf the class, gave a , rro-:t charming vocal number, and this , ycurg lady was most pleasing in her. con trniu ..ion 10 i:ic ciiiuiuui-.m cv- panied Mi.-s York as pianist and wasjj as sisted by Miss Augusta Mengedoht as violinist. j The valedictory was delivered by ; Mis Ruby Edge .-tor., and this young1 lady, in her address, showed the deep J thought nod careful preparation made; for this important occasion in the his-; torv of her class in her address on "Casting Shadows," admonishing the! members of the class in the year to j . . I. 1... .., it i,-V .-V,iiol-c lllnV I I II.l LU III- . . . I I It ,iil .. ..'.t .,' c:ist on the future, whether thev be of eree.tness and worth or add nothing of value to the community in which their future activities were to be found, bhe recounted the vondcriui changes that time has brought in the : life of the world; of the inventions C that have brought to the modern life so many labor-saving devices and aids to civilization in its onward march. She expressed to the superintendent and faculty and the citizens of Platts mouth the appreciation of the efforts they had put forth to add to the op portunities for the education of the class, and at the close, in addressing the class, expressed the feeling of re gret that this was the last time they met as an organization, with their work completed and the journey of life just opening up before them. The orator of the evening. Senator Gilbert M. Hitchcock, of Omaha, was introduced by Pr. Theodore P. Liv ingston, in a few remarks in which he expressed his admirituon of the public schools of the city and the need rf gieater interest being taken in, their welfare by the citizens of the: community, as the young men and j women here received the inspiration for their future lives that was to re- j suit in their being useful men and j women in the world's future. In in- i troducing the senator he paid him a i w ell deserved tribute as one of the i leaders in the nation's legislative J body, the United States senate, and the honor that had befallen the class in having him as the orator on this occasion. The address of Senator Ilitchock ? i1 was a most scholarly and eloquent one, filled with the deep thought and advice to the young people. The sen ator, in opening his address, outlined the virtues that p-oes to make up char acter and usfeulness and enumerated honesty, virtue, generosity, independ ence and patriotism as among the things that enter into the making of useful men and women in the battles of the world. He pointed out the rise of those born in humble circumstances to power ami force as leaders in the world and the advantages that the ; druggie had been to them in bringing to the forefront the strong and stable features of good character, which had earned for them the right of leader ship, while those horn to luxury and ease never attain the heights of life and sorrows in their view of the world and its life. He recited the men born n the we: t of a race of pioneers and sturdy men and women who had been called to the eastern centers to be come the leaders in finance, politics and the many statesmen whose lives had been laid among scenes of hard ships and sometimes want, yet in spile of this they had rrasned the laurel wreath of undying fame. Senator Hitchcock pointed out the character istics of the different nationalities of the world which had made them dis tinct from each other, and these had all been brought to America and in the great melting pot of the grand re public had been developed into a race distinct from all others and with a mission of ujjlifting the standard of civilization and carrying it to the re mote corners of the world. The first record of civilization had been thou sands of years ago in China and this had been carried westward across the continent of Asia and thence to Europe, where it was carried on across the ocean to America, and here it l.ad been developer! into a much higher standard. He stated that to this country had Leen given the task of carrying the message of culture on across tlie Pacific ocean to the Philip pine islands and making possible there at the gateway of the Orient, where the first traces of civilization hail been found, to plant the American spirit of freedom and their higher kk-als of life, and that its message might sweep over the world to the westward with benefit to the world in its uplifting influence and betterment of conditions. The c!as of R'lo is composed of the following sp'endiil young men and women : Kuby Macille Edgerton, Coeanna E. A3, "jr gLfgtafa I Have you For 35 years the Dcering Binder has done perfect work for the farmers in this county. Today, it is better than ever before. Drop in any time and see our new Dcering samples. i U j .3 i M j g g - ,: r- "T''7"-'": N I CLaBr 3 irr ;rTT ' " ' Like every successful farm imilemeiit the Peering Binder lias imitators. There are Binders and Mowers made very much like the Deering, but a wise buyer will not jay out good money for an untried "experiment" when we can get tlie "old reliable" Peering for the same money. Peering Harvesting and Haying Machinery is built by men who have made a life study of such implements. The Peering Binder you buy today, is the result of 35 years experience in building good harvesting machines. When you put a Peering Binder or Mower into your field at the beginning of harvest you have the satisfaction of knowing that no man in the world has a better ma chine than you have. We are exclusive agents for Deering Standard Twine in this tenitory. In view of the pre dicted twine shortage, we suggest that you give us your order now to avoid disappointment. JOHN F. BORDER Plattsmouth, Handley, Emil J. Ilild, Guy J. Crook, Carl M. Cunningham, Xelle Lenore Cook, Ola M. Kaffenberger, Norene G. Schulhof, Lillian M. Dwyer, Marie Louise Spies, Katherine M. Egan, Lil lian Kathryn Hartwick, Wallace J. Hunter, Harley, G. Wiles, Elsbeth 11. Koessler, Mary Ellen Hetherington, Glenn Thurston Thompson, Sophie A. Hild, Grayce Fight, Kathryn Agnes York, William T. Richardson, jr., Rohbin Richardson. Grace Magey, Alva Leta Lair, Verna A. Krejci, Clif ford I. Cecil, Leon C. Stenner. The class honors, carrying with it a scholarship in any of the state col leges or the university, was won by Miss Ruby Edgerton, who ranked as the highest, member of the class in her school w ork, and was presented by Superintendent Rrooks with her well deserved honor. The seven highest members of the class, with their rank, were as follows: Ruby Edgerton, Coeanna Handley, i'2 1-23; Elsie Roessler. HI 3-S; Verna Krejci, 1'! 3-10; Norene Schulhof, 1 7-24; Will Richardson, ill 2-21; Harley Wiles, 50 1-20. The following letter was received from President C. A. Marshall of the board of education, who is visiting in California, conveying to the class his best wishes: ! "As president of the board of i education, I send to the class of ltlo my most hearty congratulations on your graduation from our High school and hope that this first successful step to a bigger and broader life may be followed by other and greater suc cesses all through the lives of each of you. Regretting my inability to be present on this occasion, I am, most cordially yours. C. A. Marshall." The closing of the exercises was somewhat interf erred with by the fact j that the electric lights were out for several minutes, but aside from this the graduation of the class of 1!'1" was one of the most pleasing that has I een held in this city. The benedic tion was pronounced by Rev. Leete, and the happy in(l Proud young peo ple were given over to receive the congratulations of their friends. CALF AND IMG MEAL. We are "Factory Agents" for Rlatchford's Calf and Pig Meal, $3.7.. cwt. We pay the fright. Perfect substitute for milk; K'O lbs. makes 100 gallons. Our guarantee use one (juarter of it and if not satisfactory return it. Johnson Bros., Nebraska City. 5-27-1 tw seen the WIS v a. asr-r ::'l - t r ENTERTAINS IN HONOR OF MISS CATHERINE DOVEY, BRIDE-ELECT Yesterday afternoon Mrs. L. O. Minor and Miss Madoline Minor entertained a number of young lady friends at a delightful linen shower at the home of Mrs. Minor, in honor of Miss Catherine Dovey, who is to be one of the June brides. The rooms were decorated with the spring flowers, the color scheme being pink and white, and pink peonies and white ryringa being used in profusion. The guests spent a portion of the after noon in a very industrious manner, that of hemming linen dustcloths for the bride-to-be. hen the dust cloths were completed they were handed to the bride-to-be, and then the guests were ushered to the dining room, where they were served a love ly luncheon at small tables, prettily decorated in the pink and white color scheme, the peonies and ryringa be ing used here, also. Each guest's place was marked with a dainty place card. After the serving of the lunch eon and on their return to the par lors, the bride-to-be was showered with many handsome linen pieces, which will assist in introducing her into the art of housekeeping and be constant reminders of this enjoyable occasion. FRECKLES Don't Hide Them With a Veil; Remove Them With the Olhine I'resrription. This, prescription for the removal of freckles was written by a prominent physician and is usually so successful in removing freckles and giving a clear, beautiful complexion that it is sold by druggists under guarantee to refund the money if it fails. Don't hide your freckles under a veil; get an ounce of othine and re move them. Even the hrst few ap plications shoulJ .'.how a wonderful improvement, some of the lighter freckles vanishing entirely. lie sure to ask the druggist for the double strength othine; it is this that is sold on the money-back guarantee. sks: The Binder is the most im portant Machine on the Farm. GET THE BEST While You're z It! Nebraska