Newspapers / Richmond Headlight (Rockingham, N.C.) / March 21, 1902, edition 1 / Page 2
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§ —_appear to tbe during th* winter tb* ta do ia to cut down th* ■■mini feed, not tb* *n* » h given ta the aftemoen. Soft AaBed eggs are atasest positive preof •hat tbe baas ate too tat and th* beat -enty t» get rid of tb* fat la to make dfee base tract it off ta the sersteblag •■rtirtil Foe tb* meeatog feed aa •sea than eoa baadfal of wheat to An heas should be given aa loag aa in tbe It Is certainly a great compliment A inventive genian and io the manu Art nr cm of farm implements to be 3hie to any trathfoliy that tbe improve ■At la agrictdtnral implements aa ■ow manufactured has reduced tbe average time in tbe production of n tosbel of corn from four and a bolt Boon ta forty-on* minutes, ami this has reduced tb* cost of labor from •hlrly-flT* and three-fourth cents to As ami one-half cento a bushel. A like seduction In the time and expense of •Aducing wheat, onto and tbe other Arm products has been accomplished ■ho by tbe wonderful improvements ASd* in farm implements. This has Awn done since 1850, in tb* face of tbe that labor on tb* farm daring At period has advanced at least forty A fifty per cent. t ' '** cost of growing eova. cutting it —* patting u in the silo, has been y"*! reported at almost all figures Asa ft to 88 per ton. We do not doubt *A that U has been dona for the dAoBar atm when tbe has been —A rich and well cultivated, and tb* A** Aodeea Improvements were at ■Ad fa da tb* work, bat we think * Air average 'would A nearer AsMe that with t A ordinary farmer. A** A a favorable season. But there dA ba many w a would ilka to grow y** for feeding to stock at that price. OAalnly w* know of now* wA would y A AO them at that price, and Aa would car* to grow them at *4 ■ A* U they could grow other crop* ■ad find a ready cash market tor them. M icgards tb* vain* of them, an aver W» o* the rartoua room show that tA fi*aa* amount A each fad with equal ■A Ay sad grain resulted a ■ttle la favor of tA roots, but thl# was yw than offset by tA two tacts •hat tA root* cannot A Apt in as A4 condition for 1st* spring or sum Aa feeding aa can tA ensilage, and Ant there is more apt to A a crop *y* tram droagbt or other causes W*h tk« roots than with th* corn, droughts of th* past two years gAmA led many to believe that having **®p*5to* to feed in th* lommtr when ■sstaiwe are growing poorer ta of al AaA aa much importance, and some ■ajr more, than ha vlag It to tb* winter —iAa»Mrlcao Cultivator. t - — _ ***■” »w several method* ©f keep cm Cor winter use. Tke beet one » •***& Mch eU In melted paraffin; wfen It coe gala tee on the ratface •jratoe carefully and poor a little rati * paraffin on the spots Imperfectly ““"W*- When the air Is entirely « «tads« from the egg It will keep a long *■» It pet away 0 n cool, dry place.. 0 n nice wooden boa. two or 0pers deep, small sod down. If 0 0 not nt band, good melted 0“ drippings or lard may be nsad ln **** with' this yog can feel •* Tonr eggs for two months or If they ate kept 0 s cool pUce. . 0* tat wm not turn randd. **«*•• flUs tbs pons and sbsts the air, and thus keep* the in •Okras disintegrating. I net her excellent way to pack eggs -*0 wteter nss 0 ts pesos them, small 0*wg to n bed 0 cam moo salt, 00 ***k *•!«). When oos layer 0 OH 0 an aronad c*r* fully with °0«* 0 a second layer eratiane until the box the salt tightly bat 0 place, an that an air 0 ex win be good for two to skimmed mUk gradually. A spoon ful of oil meal added to the milk li bsneflcla'. and It any symi>?c_j of scoars occur, a spoonful of flour, or an egg mixed In the milk may bo given, la feeding sktmmed milk it la well to add a pinch of soda frequently, to prevent Indigestion. Dry meal or bran »*y he fed. Ia a few weeks give tbe **lf good, dean hay, or area straw, bet cm fodder la better when one has It Oats sad eon*, either ground or whole, may he fed night and morn ing. At about four months of age water may be sabsUtntsd for milk. If It refuses to drink water when It la oOsred. leave tho water la the pen or yard, and when It becomes vary thirsty tbs calf win drink.—Ells L. Layton. In Tbs Kpitotnlst ___ gMwrtas sad SKIaaW Mane I wish to my Just a word on tbe sub Jeet of shingling. Fanners and stock mot*, from the nature of their occupa tions. require, large, commodious haras, sheds, pens, coops, etc. All these buildings must be covered with some cheap, effective, water-tight ma terial, and wooden shingles, taking tbs country as a whole end conditions that generally prevail, are esteemed moot practicable for th» purpose. The best cedar shingles are the most eco nomical in the end, as they can be laid much faster and are far more certain to make a tight roof than the cheaper grades containing knots that are most sure to give trouble, sooner or later. Buy tbe grade marked “Extras,” and do not begrudge the “extra" cost. Now comes a very vital point, name ly. the kind of nail to be used to fasten the shingles. This matter has received very sure and practical demonstration to this section of the country. Never use a wire nail of any description. Be snre to employ a cut nail every time. Furthermore, qse an Iron cut nail of jnffMLtftm; not a at sal cut nail. The wire nail will not stand the moisture conditions which prevail on a roof, it la slim, rapidly corrodes under damp ness, and very often will drop shingles that have been laid leas than five years, shingles that have not seen oo*-third their period of usefulness This makes It very expansive; and I know of many losses of this kind that are to bo traced to the use of the wire nalL The steel cut nail, while vastly better foe the purpose than the wire, la very Inferior to the Iron nalL Steel cor rodes much faster than Iron. This has been demonstrated beyond a shadow of a doubt to the case of steam boiler tnbes as well as with roof coverings. I myself recently was working on an old roof, removing 0ld shingles that had been laid thirty years and replac ing them with now ones This roof was shingled with the old-fashioned Iron nail, and this naU was tough and strong, necessitating much effort to taking off the old shingles. This matter of shingle nails Is no notion of mine, and I cannot empha sis# It too strongly, ns I hare seen the wlro advocated but a short time sines to a certain newspaper article, where as I positively know that to nae a wire naU to shingling will invariably result to financial loss.—M. Sumner Parkins, to the Country Gentleman. ■■■ uuuni straw. Wbsn straw la stacked outside the barn and some of ft la wanted In the stable for feeding or bedding purpose! the usaal plan is to carry In a little at a time oo a fork or in a rope or strap allng. This in tbe nse of a fork U Mythlng but a speedy operation, next to impossible on a windy day, and with a sling a vary unpleasant Job in cold weather. Procure first some light laths, aay three-quarters by two Inches, and make an almost square frame, using eleven of the lath pieces aa If making a box with one corner left oat. On tbe inside of this frame, at the desired height nail two heavier and longer plaeea for handles. A couple of three by ooe Inch hoards, proper length and with one end narrowtd down to w** An max uno«. At tba baada, w*l aaewer far tba beadle pteore. On tba battaaa af tba tnuM aad laths ar board*. letttog tba tw* oaaraat tba antra injact a beat At la tbaa la frtat Tbaaa ahaold ba ahttia bnvlar tbaa tba othara, ta pro vaat apttagtag. Brtwoeu tba pcofoet tag aada place a —all woodaa wbatl ate aa right taahoe la dlaaieter. Tbla wbtal aajr ba a dmlu piece tot from a aaa ar aaaaad a half facti board, aad bate a Mgbt baa baad Attad aa ta keep It teem epMttlag. or ba a wheat te— aa aid barrow or something ate Aaf- A Debt wire (poke wbaal flam a tap wages la aaoatlaat far tba par Tbr ub as which tba wbaal ra rMrm la attoehed ta tba aadar ride eA tba prajetllag pit ora af tba frame bp a etaple drtraa arar It tats rate plan Tba twe rear upright places af tba tea— astead dawa Irrri with •A* Anr rim af tba wheat ta aet aa ON PRACTICAL PIETY REV. TALM AGE’S SUNDAY SERMON. Argues That Wo Cause* Neglect Our Religious Duties and Prosper la Our Business. ■Wsoiiixqtok. D. CL—I* this diaoowres Stli^f*****? “’'••A*" the Idas that tha ChriaUsu religion isos good for this world aa tha nest, and will help w U do any all things, haring promise of tha Ufa that now 1* and of that which is to coma7 There la a gloomy and paasire way of waiting for erenta to coma noon as, and tharell a heroic wav of going oat to meet them, strong in God and leering nothing. When tha body of Catiline waa found on , haUledeld, it was found far ia adaumco of all oia troops and among the aaemy. and ta# best wiy ia rvot for os to lie down and let tbs erenta of life trample orer us, but fo forth in a Christian spirit d«Ur mined to conquer. You are expecting pros perity, and I am determined, so far aa I harei anything to do with it, that you shall not be disappointed, and, therefore, I pro pose. aa God may help me, to project upon ▼oor attention a new element of snceesa. You have in the bueincaa Arm frugality, patience, industry, perseverance, economy —• 'try strong business firm—but there needs to be one member added, mightier than them all, and not a silent partner either, the one introduced by my text. ‘‘Godliness, which ie profiuble unto all things, haring tha promise of the life that now ia as well as of that which ia to come." I suppose you am all willing to admit that godlmeas is important in its sternal reationa. but perhaps tome of you say. All 1 want is an opportunity to say a prayer before I die, and ail will be well." There are a treat many people who sap poe* that if they can finally gat aafely out of this world into a better world they will hare exhausted the entire advantage of our holy religion. They talk aa though re ligion were a mere nod of recognition which w* are to give to the Lord Jeaua on pur way to a htevenly mansion; as though it were an admission ticket, of no oh ex cept to give ia at toe door of bearea. And there are thousands of people who bare great admiration for a religion of tha shreud and a religion of the coffin and a religion of the cemetery who hare no ap preciation of a religion for the bank, lor the farm, for the factory, far tha ware hposc. for the jeweler's shop, for tlB'ifiCoe. how, while 1 would not throw any alar on a post mortem religion. I want to-day to ealogue an anta-mortem religion. A relig ion {hat is of no uss to you while you live of no use to you when you die. Qod.ineaa is profiuble unto all things, haring prom ire of tha Ufa that now ia aa well as of that which ia to coma." And I hare always noticed that when grae* it rerr low in a man's heart be talk* a great deal id prayer meetings about deaths and •boat coffins and shout graves and about churchyards. I have noticed that tbs healthy Christian, the man who is living near to God and is on the straight road to heaven, ia fall of jubilant satisfaction and talks about the duties of this life, under* standing well that if God Ke.ps him to live rifht He will help him to die risht. wow, m the first place, I remark that Rodlijeei is good for a man’* physical health. I do not moan to cay that it will restore a broken down constitution or drive rheumatism from the limhs or neural gia from the Umpire or pleurisy from the side, but I <!o mean to say that it gives oaa such habits and puts one in sack con dition as are most lav ore bis for physical health. That I believe, andtthat I avow. Kvcrybody knows that bno' spirit pa rood physical- * unrtsL dejection, am __ pulsation of the heart and with ... yuration of the lungs. They lower ■vi tality and slacken tha ciieolation, -bile exhilaration of spirit ppurs the very helm of heaven through all the currents of life. The sense of insecurity which sometimes hovers over an tin regenerate man or pounces upon him with the blast of ten thousand trumpets of terror it moat deplet ing and most exhausting, while tbs feeling that all things are working together for our good now and for our everlasting wel fare is conducive to physical health. You wiC observe that godliness inducts Industry, which is the foundation of good health. There is no law of hygiene that will keep a laxy man well. Pleurisy will stab him. erysipelas will barn him, jaun dice will discolor him, goat will cnpr.'o him, and the intelligent physician will not prescribe antiseptic or febrifuge or anodyne, bat saws and hammers and yardsticks and crowbars and pick axes. Thera is no such thing as good physical condition without positive work of some kind, although you should sleep on down of swan or ride in earrings of softest upholstery or bars on your table all the luxuries that wars poured from the wins vats of Ispahan and Shirts. Oar re lirion says: “Away to tha bank, away to tbs field, away to tha shop, away to the factory! Do sores thing that will enlist all the energies of your May, mind and soull" “Diligent in business, fervent in spirit, serving' tbs Lord," while upon the bam back of tbs Idler and the drone comes down the sjtsrp lash of the apostle as be says. "If any man will not work, neither shall he set." mental discipline, better than bstlss lettrea to purify the taste, better than matbemat we to harness the mind to ell intricacy and elaboration, better than logic to marshal the intellectual forces for onset and vic tory. Again I remark that godliness is profit r*i* fot disposition. Lord Asblsy, befme ba went into a great bsttle, was haard to offer this prayer: “0 Lord, 1 shall bV"r b"7! H1 fOT«»‘ Thee, for get me not. With such a Christian cnspo ritaon as that a man ja independent of all nfrr am al amiss. Onr piety wQ] have a tinge of our natural temperament. if , he cross snd sout and fretful naturally, after ha becomes a Christian he win always have to be armed a^iast tha rebellion of those evil incline But religion has turned the wildest na tkrea. It hay turned Iretluluses into grab itodc, despondency into goed cheer, sad thoas who were hard and ungovernable and uaoompromising have bean made pli able aad conciliatory. Good resolution, reformatory effort, will not effect the change. It takas s mightier arm and a mightier band to bend aril hab its than the hand that bent the bow ol Ulysses, and it takes a stronger lasso it— aver bald tha baffalo on the prairie. A manufacturer cares but very little foi a stream that slowly runs through tin meadow; but, values a torrent that leapt from rook to rock and rushes with mad energy through the valley and out toward tha sea. Along that river yon will find fluttering shuttles and grinning mill and flashing watar wbtol. And a nature thl swiftest, the most rugged snd the most tremendous—that is tbe nature that God turns into greatest usefulness. RaUoion will give an equipoise of spirit. It will keep you from ebnUitiona of tem per, snd you know a great many fine buai nasaat have been blown to atoms by bad temper. It will keep you from womment 1 about frequent loss; it will beep you back front squandering and from dissipation: it will give you a kindness of apirit whiel will be easily distinguished from that men store courtesy which shakes hands violent ly with you, asking about tbe health a your family, when there ia no anxiety ti know whether your child ia well or sick but tbe anxiety ia to know how man) dosen cambric pocket handkerchiefs you will taka and pay cask down. It will pro pare you for the practical duties of every day lift. In New York City there was a merchant hard ia his deatiagi with his fellows, wht had written over him banking house or his counting hoes* room, "No compromise." Then when some merchant got in a criaii and went down—no fault of hie, but a con junction of evil eircumstancea—and all th< other merchants ware willing to compro nuefr—they wonld taka seventy-five centi on the dollar or fifty cents or twenty centi —coming to thia man last of all, ha said; "No oompromim. I’D take 100 cents on th< dolltr, and I can afford to wait." Well, tha wheel turned, and after awhile that man was in a crisis of business, and be tent out bis agent to compromise, and tbs agent said to tha merchants, "Will you take fifty esais on the dollar?” "No.” "Will yon take anything?" "Well taka 100 cents on tho dollar. No compromise." And the man who wrote that inscription over hi* counting house door died in destitution. Oh, w* want more of tha kindness of the gospel and tha apirit of love in onr business enterprises! now many yonM men ntre loanu in tn« religion of Jesus Christ • practical help? How many there are to-day who could tes tify out of their own experience that god liness is profitable for the life that now is) There were timea in their business career when they went here for help and there for help and yonder for help and got no help until they knelt before the Lord cry ing for His dciircraaec, and tho Lord ma enad them. • lag bank not far -from New York—* village bank—an officer could not balance hit aocounta. He had worked at them day after day, night after night, and he was tick nigh unto death aa a result. Ha knew that be bad not taken one farthing from that bank, but somehow, for some reason, inscrutable than, the accoonta would not balance. Tba tima rolled on and the morn ing of tba day when the books should pas* under the inspection of the other officer* arrived, and he felt hipiaelf in awful peril, conscious of his own integrity, but unable to prove that integrity. That morning he went to the bank early, and be knelt down before God and told the whole story of mental anguish, and ba said: “O Lord, 1 have dona right, I have preserved my in tegrity. but here I am about to be over thrown unless Thou shouldst come to my rescue. Lord, deliver me.” And for one hour be continued the prayer before God, and then he arose and went to an old blot ter that he had forgotten all about. He opened it, and there lay a sheet of figure* which he only needed to add to another line of figure*—some line of figure* he had forgotten and knew not where he had laid them—and the accounts were balanced, and the Lord delivered him. You ara an infi del if von do not believe it. The Lord de livered him. God answered his prayer, as Ha will answer your prayer, oh, man ol business, in every crisis when you coma to Him. Now, if this be so, then I am persuaded, aa yon are, of tba tact that tho vast major ity of Christians do not fully teat the veins of their ratifies. They aru like a farmer I it* California with 15,000 acres of good wheat land and owl taring only a quarter ol an act's. WV /ww BVl *U IVftH BMU« UR religion of Jtrea Chriat a practical aifau rrary day of your bnciatcc Ufa and all tbia rear, beginning now, and tomorrow mors nag patting into practical effect thia holy religion and demonstrating that godlioam la profitable ban m well a* hereafter? Bow ean yon net along without tbia re Ugion? Ia yuor pbyaiealhaelth ao good yoa do not want this dirin# teak? Ia year mind a* «k*r, ao vaat, ao oomprrbanair*, that yon do not want I hi* dirks inspire Hon? Is yoor worldly burin*** ao {her ongkly oaiablkbad that yon bare no oaa far Oat religion which baa bean tba bait and daliroranea of tons af thousand* <fl man in ark** of worldly trouble? And il wbat I bare said k tree than yon as* what n fatal blonder it k wban a man adjoarai to Ufa's expiration tbs aaa* of religion. A man who pootpMlm religion to aixty year) year* to* 1st*. H. oaa of Ood by flaai in for a wl __tnv comfort* Yea want rebel on to-day la tba training of ttot child. ^Yon will want ensiomar. ?*» wanted religion yastarday to rerb year tamper. U yoor arm itran* enough to bant yoor way through tha floods? On yoa. without bring krernd ia tha mail af bod s eternal W amid tba aaaanh af iB ball'* are? Oaa you waft alone t__r_J trembling pare* and amid the** gapiai aartbgnabaa? Cbn yoa. water logged aat meat eblrered, eullire Ha* gal*’OH, boa nanny tbare bare bang who, postponing Um retoan af Jasua Chriat, bar* plea gad ink mktahm they could never sorrost, altbaugi they Bred sixty ireare after v and Ukeear th3r maniad hodkTandaT tba nabto^S • *. THE SABBATH SCHOOL international lesson comments FOR march 23. ■sfijssti TiawrMM. Ipk. Th 1MU OaldM Text! bh. «„ ■« w,min v«**s »*-!*-OOUMIU7 oa Ik* Bay's I.. 11"h»ts no fellowship." Have no srtTu-ffiiusKS'*' srss pot actually oommit certain sins, but if we tolerate or encourage them, we are par takers with tha transgressor*. We should never be accessory to the sins of others, either by cotnmendstioo, counsel, consent nr concealment. See 2 Cor. 6: lt l*. The •*rP" etandard demands a complete separation from this present evil world, «P*fit sad practice. 1 John 2: 19. W; Rom. 12: 1, I. "Unfruitful woA." »£• works, not fruits (GaL S: *™lt death (Rom. i: 21; Qal. 6: I), which is not fruit in a true sense. "Darkness" Sin is dark nees and its parent la the prinos of darkness. Plante cannot bear fruli in tha abasnoa of light. Ths graces of tbe Spirit flourish in the light. Biuful works coma from the dark doss of ignorance, seek the darknea of concealment and lead to the darkness of hell. "Reprove them." Speak against them. Take a firm definite stand against every form of sin. as did John the Baptist. Jesus and Paul. The parent of crime and panpariim in our country to day is the liquor traffic. It thrives in dzrknew, behind screen*. It could not for a moment endure the c*** of an enlight ened peop*e. And yet this iniquitous truffle is entrenched behind the Lsw of the lend end public opinion. The super* lAtiee dute of the Christian citizen is to oppose and denounce this vile, soul-destroy* business, by voice, by pen, by vote. .* * I* u * *bAme/' etc. They Are too ▼ue to be mentioned or even thought of with but Abhorrence. The only Aign of their ahzmo was that they aought tbe eovsr of secrecy. How low they mutt have sunk when it wai a shame for ths SgOftfe •*«» “spesk" about what they did- But there are some subjects about which it is our duty to remain silent. It is a shams and disgrace for the public prints to be filled with tha low ana nan testing details of crime. "In secret." Oh tha abomination* that ere carried on in secret! No Christian should join himself in any way to those whoa* action* muit be kept oovsrad. Jeuna said, “In secret have I said nothing." The apostle seems to speak here of the Gentile idolater*, and of their horrid mysteries which none were permitted to divulge oa pain of death. 13. "That are reproved.” "When they are reproved."—R. V. "By the light.” It is the light which discovers what was concealed before in darkness, therefore we ought to be shining lights in ths world, and by a holy example and a godtv life make light! Let as know the truth about the deraatationa of the liquor curse. Let it he known that it makes ninety per cant, of all our paupers and criminals, and that it costs us mors than one hundred million dollars each year. Draw back the curtain and let us for one moment see the heartache and sorrow and disease and death that it brings to us; blighting, ruining, cursing wherever it touch**; and then with an enlightened and awakened public conscience we wifi rise up and drive out tbi* monster. ii aviso tnou trat neepeit, etc. Sleep U an emblem of death, ana both deep and death are used to represent the soul in a sinful state. Sleep is a state of (11 unconsciousness, (2) seeming security, (3) darkness, (4) inactivity, (5) unconcern; while death includes the idea of corrup tion. From this state, through the power of the Holy Ghost, we are to awake and arias. Goa uses means to awaken men, and by Hie power we are to come forth from the death of sin to a new life in Jesus Christ. Chap. 3: 4-8. "Shall shine upon thee" (R. V.). Shedding forth His lose, joy and peace into our hearts, and thus bringing us into a state of rest, com fort and hohneaa. 18. "Circumspectly.’’ See R. V. Watch ful and eautious in order to avoid danger. The Christian needs to be prudent. II. “Redeeming the time.” To redeem time is to re gam what is lost and to save wnat is left. "Buying up the opportunity.” R. T. margin. By eagerly seisins the mo ments, by diligence, by continued applica tion this can oe dose. "Days are eril.” The present times are dangerous, and are full of troubles and temptations, and only tbs watchful and diligent have eny reason to expect to keep their garments clean. 17. “Be ye not foolish”’ (R. V.) Here is a moat evident allnaion to the orgies ol Bacchus, in which his votaries acted like madmen, running about, tossing their heeds from shoulder to shoulder, appearing to be in every sense completely frantic. 18. "Bo not drunk.” Do not become drunken with wine end act like tools or roadmen. There were doubtless converted drunkards among the Christians to whom Paul wrote, and wine waa their especial danger. Intemperance is a folly, a waste, a degradation, a tin. It (1) divests men of their native dignity; (2) sinks them below the brutes; (3) injures body and mind; (4) wattes their substance; (8) de stroys the tiredness of the borne; (61 is the parent ot other vices; (7) it prohib ited by the Seripturee; (8) must be re nounced or the end will be destruction. “Wherein ia excess.” “Wherein is riot.” —-R- V. The word bora translated axoeje means proflgacy and debauchery of every kind, each aa are generally connected with drunkennasa, and especially among tba worshipers of Bacchus.’ PaaVs prohibition W positive and absolute, wine that eaaaas listing U forbidden. "Tilled with tba Spirit. Hera Paal shows tha difference between tha worship of the tree God aad of tha has then deities. Altar offer ing sacrifices to Bacchus, tha god of wins, <t was the custom of tha paopia to gat drunk ia bis honor. Tba >or that to kindled by wine is degrading, that which is kindled by tba Holy 8plrlt ia edifying and *aal iasplrlig To bo filled with tha Spirit ia to ha (a possession of tha graces Oftha Spirit; it impHen divine gnidsnes; It is to bu filled with God and to aoeapt Him aa tha oaly portion of tha tool. 1*. "Speaking, etc. Mea filled with arias ring vile longs, bat God's people abut the songs of Zion. Christianity (aaro ^lonjt-n^F# & w nob satisfied ratil Ha girts the heart. Christianity ia a heart religion. 90 ‘Always.* In times of adversity and trial as wstTaa in Umse of Wearing. 'Tor ^ 01 u >1. “BabrnttUng,'' eta. Than ia a aa taal enbmissltis that Christiana owe ana to another. aondmcendlng to bear ana an other's burdens, not advancing them selves above others, hot in love serving one an other. •tote $4J sv, Portland. Maine. Special.—Granville W. Leighton, taller of tho National Traders' Beak, of thin city, la ondar swart, a set 1-con loosed defaulter to tba artoat of MAN- Tooaday night tha bank officiate would make ao atata BrtM fartkar thaa Lalgbtoa bad made over to tba mutilation all bu real ea *#• *-id othar proparty, that thin. to gri.Lar with kla bend, will am ha good tba Iona aortalaod by tba beak. Tha da t stele a of tha dofalontloa was broagbt •bout by tba dloeovary of aa apparent nrror fa Leighton's hooka. RAM’S HORN BLASTS T; HERS are atlll a few men who scat ter alms and sound \ troumpota b« jVfe? tore them. ***" The hand of of ficialdom cannot . aaro the world. K The soundest fruit will be on the j. tempest-torn tree. fl«\ It we preyed as ■E7 lour as God would listen we would oarer cease. .7 . V1 VTUUJ Iff mort ••ally lost than the pebbles of error. If li not wise to sat the home on fir* ‘o thaw tb* frossn water-pipes. Partial statistics of defalcation and smbesilement In the United State* and Canada during 1901 show that about 17.800.000 went astray in this criminal fashion. Considering the temptations that beset custodians of other people’s money, the wonder grows that the percentage of loss ihould be eo alight as compared with the enormous aggregate of the coun. try’s financial transactions, observes the Philadelphia Record. STIBUIQ) Iimihd ,ains double Daily Service Mveu Her York, Tkmpi, Atluti, Hiv Orieui aid PeUti Sootk aid VaL IN KKKKUT UKi . In. 1QQ|. BOOTH WAR IL ‘ Daily Dally t _ No. II No. 17 T^I I*-®-*- l»»pm 1110am 'S? !fd,lp“U> •*» pm 7 10 am Lt. BalUmara. - - 6 46 pm 0 14 am J-J W“*>la«»o«, W.S.By. 7 00 pm 1101 am V ‘ B. A. L. 10 17 pm 1 M pm Lt. Pfmaorg. “ •< llto pa 0 lg pm Lt, Horllaa “ 14a aia 6 46 cm Lt. UMdonou. = TEv am <7Tpm Lt. BaMgb, •• g n am 7uL Lt. goolhoru ploaa. •» 5 27 am 9 *7 Lt. Hamlat, •• 0 ia ara i0 u pm Lt. Columbia. J " Ego am 1 Og am Ar. flaimnaah - )106 pm 4 40 am Ar.aaokaoortlie, “ 8 60 pm 105 ata Ar. Tampa,_M 6 08am 6 40 pm Lt. Now York,N.Y.P.A N.f 7*65 am 8 66^ Lt. PhllAdolphla, •• So lg Lt.Now Yora.u. Li.a.B.Cot a ut) m | Lt. BalUmoro.il. B.P.O0,. fo 30 pa Lt. Waabioo.N.iwXa. 8»iim EV.PottumSSui, bTaTE oarpm TiSSi rl'M0!?00’ V ut»«“ 111 68 am }*»■ Nurlloa la 65 am 1 30 pm 11-uTS*?*1*' lag am augpm Lt. UalatKb. - y 60 am a 66 Dm Lv. *>u(born Plum, “ 6 05 am C la pm Lt- Hamlot._" 6 36 am 10 35 pm 1 Lt. Wllmlogtop, ' . 8 06 pa A/. Cnarlotw,_“ 9 23 am lb sTiJa t7‘“ 9 46 am 1 66~um Lt. Qr68o>ood, “ ji 18 pm 143 am LT.Atbooa, “ 8 18 pm 413 am Ar- Atlanta, t_« 8 66 pm 7 60 am Ar.’Augur a, a A W. O. 6 40 um. ArTMAQou, A. ol Oa. ? jo pm H'lt) am Ar. Moolgom'ry.AAW.P. 9S0pm <80 am Ar. Mow Or brum, L. A N. 7 2g an _ Ar. NaahvtUa.N.c.4at.L. a ioVir 6U pm Ar. MTmphU,-_“ 4~16~pm 816 am NOBTHWAKD, Dolly Dally ... . „ No. M No. M Lt. Memphla.N.C.A M.L. 13 45 noon »00 pm Lr. HaihrlHa, •• »appm iso am Lt. Now Oflaaru,L. A N., 8 00"pm " .... Lt. MoMla, L. A 8.. 11 So am ....... Lt. Moatnja»'fy.A.AW.P ivia IMpto Lt, Maaoa. dot Oa....7~~»oo am 480pm L». AuitoMa, O. A W. C. 10 08 am . Lt. AUaaM, : B.AJL. UMaooa a 00pm ArAtlMaa, “ 157 pm 1311pm At Qrreuwood, « 511 pm 107 am Ar. CbmMr, •« 7 M pm 4 00am Lt. Cbarloua. - ~7~»fpm " f 00am Lt. WUmLngton, J05pm . Lt. Hamlet. " 10 to pm 7"~T0 vn tT. Souchsra HSmt - 1111 pm ai4aa LT.RaM«b, - 1 M am 1105 am Ar. awdaraon, " 8 07 am 11 38 pm Lt. NorUoa “ 185 am l IS pm Lt.WoMob. " 5Mam 140 pm Ar. Portsmouth, » 7 18 am 8 15 Dm A*’WasA’l—Ji « Mam Ar. Baltimore, qa.P.Oo.Uam Ar.Naw TorT,O.D.g.a.Oo. tap# pa Ar. Phlla-phla, l.V.PANf 5 4* pm 810 am Ar. NawTorfc, M 1U pm 500 am . _ _ no. h no. « Lt. Tam pm & A. L. By. *00 pm 1*0 am Lt. JaekaoaTlU*, « 1010am 1 Mpm Lt. OaTacoah •• 1H pm U M pm Lr.Mamtte.1 « 1 Hp. «Uu. Lt. Kami**. “ 1* Mpm T Mam V*- iryfty . “ »Mpm ■ 17 am Lv.BaMafc, “ 1 M am M M pm V- fSX*1* " •Warn 11M pm Lt. Borltoa_ « • U am U U pm Lt. BtakmoadT - IHam IM pm At- WaMttaytoa, WAIy.ll 10am 0Mpm A»-•*«»*»*. P-B-B IlNn 11 Mpm : 15s isa H. & LEABP.T. >, i, /. M. BABBT. p. A O. K., B. B L, BDMOH, O. r. A.. t'ortamoatk, Ta. . f'l ?• >■ At.BakHh.B- 0. B B L. BOTIOH. Oaooral nmamr Acaot, JAB B BABB, lot Ttae-P?m?**a«a-|\lte Portemoath, Ta. ABERDEEN & ASHEBORO R. R. COBDEEWD 8 HXDOLB. Dally laaapt Paaday. Bo. U Bo. M Ka r Bo. 71 • Ma • Mp I* Abordoaa at II Ma I Mo • Ma 1 Mp Plaafeata* 1* Ma I Mp M llo Jaafcaoa (pa* • OOp 11 Ma S»lP Btaaoo *Ma 100p • Mp • Mp ar AaAaOppo *Ma l*Ma IB* Tray 11 Ma • Mp , Ml Olload t Ma M Mp arBlgk Bolat It TOa 9. B PAOB, Oaa. (apt.
Richmond Headlight (Rockingham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 21, 1902, edition 1
2
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