Newspapers / The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.) / Jan. 4, 1924, edition 1 / Page 1
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-v - . ' . " )". V'. V I t ' K. 5 in v mr? ; t!i cs tilt y:rr l'-I" mki -ii. f t.. ,a; i;;r; -ill s . i -: A7 u i ii w v ' cosouDaiao.a,i!Ri.-. v;'" V'V'' THE ONLY NEWSPAPEtl PUBLISHED IN MADISON COUNTY 5 MARSHALL, MADISON COUNTY, k FRIDAY, JANUARY 4th, 1924. No G.OF v. 4 ;?f.. IT Uzn Trc:t Editor Newt Record j-0 u r ccrz-ity was made fid by tha i:ith of Mrs.,; Hattla Frice, wL'j cf J. Vr Friee, on Christ- m;j d?y at(l o'clock p4m. "'She ia rmived by her hv!and and tro brothers. Mrs. Price had be: a a great sufferer for many mc-lis with cancer of the rirht eye. The writer visited her regular, during her sickness and' death and do; not think that I irver seen any .one su2er astheiidbut ahe bore it with J' ttl:-c3 and crave! ti die ind ! ti uV.svei of her" 'suffering. .3 c:.-a said she was prepaxed to nut her-Savicf, ? Mrs, Price 'was.' an ideal woman and as . good a woman as lived... in our conannity and will bernissed. Sit r?3 tsirty-seven ytars old, and : i been a menbei of the E:;lLi church f ortwenty years. II ; Lrrbmd haitcea Vpry at , . to' her ullr tzt sick- ; Rtn pxi death,, a la. d" greatly v xnczrns her death. . -" C v 5 T ' The funeral servkes was held Wedstcday, December' 2Stb, at the Eaptist churcVat, the Hats bfEprina Creek conducted by v Rer. B. B. Plemmons and Rev " J. IT, Cojdill, accompanied by a larja congregation of nehlhbors r ;'tni frienfj and laid to rest in thai; ' i cf Cprinl Creek Cem , itery v . ' 3 Lill that overlooks ths L:r-J Flats of Spring s Cr ; where fche will rest froa Grape .Vise Itcns Briggs of a Long Branch Everything 'was. calm, and lovely at v t h i s place during Xmaa. - v N ', . , Our pastor preached . for ; us Xmas day: - . y .. ' ' "s. . Our Sunday school, is good; the interest is growing. We have a good prayer meet ing each Sunday night Mr. was visiting friends here last Sunday.;- t .. v Mr. Aron Tilson ,was a visitor here last y Sunday f rym Ashe- ville., -'a,,- Uncle Dan Lewis . has. been sick for a few days but is-im-proving. ' :,"iV";; ' ": ' ; Mr. Tom Cargile, Mr. Dewey Wallin, Mr. Vaughn Fisher and MrT E. S. Morgan attended the Fifth Sunday meeting at Laurel Branch. All enjoyed the meet ing fine. The writer was pleased to shake the hands of so many of his old; friends : from - Mars lill. t It made him think of his boyhood days andi school eays at that place" also was pleased to. meet and bear the able and brcible sermon 1 preached the fifth Sunday, at Laurel Branch church by our Madison county boy,' A V, Reece, who has been State Evangelist m Alabama since July 1st, 1919. " . ' i The writer "as a student of iars v'-fliJl , with thousands of THE FIRST PRAYER III CONGRESS It Was Utteredla the Ccntlsental Ccrjrcss the First Morn- ; fzt After the Rumor o! the Cann:. Js of Boston, and I "Ccnslstea of the.Th!rty-flrst P::n, Followed3 Jyn Extespsraneoiis Prayer Tbt itlnlx all Patriots. By tJUAKER O'JAYLOR - this jr'-titvl'-" Pesra ba to her. I have been North Carolma feels that Mars islci to say that: her husbandJ Hill College is a light house in J. V. Price and Mr. , and Mrs J. II. Price to thank the neigh borhood friends for their kind ness, during the sickness and death of the dear wife and daughter., " v Success to The News-Record and its editor. - VRS. CARTIE GARDNER this part of the moral vineyard. Through' The "News-Record I send my best wishes to all its readers wishing you all a pros perous and happy New year. Sincerely,. EnochS Morganv Marshall, N. C, R-2. C;; Littls Ffc3 Tali Over Faxily Financial Affdrs Like Partners lnEssteess. v . . dft oyer from last week) The school on the head of Uttla Pine gavel a very nice presraa Friday afternoon con - sistlrl cf Eons, recitations and dial;.-:i The house was beautifully decorated by the chl!-rt but the object of beauty to Cera was the Christmas tree. My cf the children, as well as tl: parents,' had never eca a Christaas . tree.. Their tesiher, Mies Dockxeyy worked ' hard' preparing presents and deccration for the tree in order that no body would .be disap po!r!sa. i Santa C 1 a u s was trsi;st to give : the. presents to 'tha cLildren A. : Z ivtral of ; the , parents - and p;' ltf tie school came out v 1! V cf . them' .' made ' a ort t; Sa cf praisa and grautti ta t 3 tr-.ccr. They said that ti cr: Lzvizt by f-r the best ;il they ever had uti there 1 e- "' 'Al statement from prohibit- icasadauarters at Salisbury is to r,a cHect that II a d i s o n ecu I ;tl a dryc his tha reputation of ,t coiatyiathe l 3. '.v 1 lv.-;llctandlz2 t h e above t -:r.t there is plenty to do j . ETcryboiy cstbtLindthe c :3t-ihel?. When financial , matters come up for discussion in your home, what is the result? ; " " Do" ' you become angry and make accusations that areun-, just, harsh and unwarranted, or do you talk matters over ealmly and attempt to come to amend ly basis of consideration? Partners n business do not literally ' "fly at each other" when it becomes necessary to retrench iu expenditures; why talk matters over. ' They talk matters over in a calm arid thinking way. Ther attempt a combination of 'ideas with the hope that, seen from many ansles, results may be brought about V Why is this not a sensible plan v for your jown home finances.';.:;.---'; ''-, V '--a '.. tr-'V-' Get the , family together, tell thebryour side of the; matter, ask their ideas and be sure tnat they ara are not expecting to be jumped on if their ideas and yours do not coincide. .You will .never ""get at the tnith with anyone if you can not keep your head in an argu ment, nor if you throw it up at the others afterward in a sneer ing way. Don't be extravagant fr y oux works of censure an you may be sure of amore sym' pathetic effort to co-opera with you., s THE verv filst act of the first session or the Continential Con gress wa the passage of the following reflblution arranging for prayer Tuesday,; September 6, ., 1774. Resolved, that the Rev.-Mr, Duche be desired to open Congress tomorrow niorningith prayer, at Carentr'l hall, at nine, o'clock." Th tint nrtver inr Conirress w reverently described by Jobs Adams in thi letter to iU wife: ' : . ' v4: ; :"Who tht Congress first met, Mr Gushing first made a motion that it should be opened with prayer.' It was opposed by one or two, bcoause twr were so divided in religious sentiments some were Epis copalians, Borne Quakers, some Anabaptists, 'some Presbyterians and some ConnregationaliBts-tbat we could not agree in the same aot of bishop. Mr. Saniual Adams rose" and said, 'he was not bigot, and could heat a pray er from a gentlemen of piety, and virtue who was at the mom time a friend to his country."; lie wae a 'strangor in Pbi iadelphia, but had heard that DrDouche deservedhat charcter and therefore heVoved that Dr. Douche, an Episcopalian clergyman, might be desired" to read prayers to the Congress '; tomorrow' morning. The motion was seconded, and passed in the affirmative. Mr. Randolph, our president, waited on :Mr. (Douche and received for answer that if his health would permit, he eorTalnly would. Accordingly next morn ing he appeared, with his clerk and his pontificals, and read the collect for the seventh day of September, whichwas the Thirty-flrst Psalm. You must remember that this was the first morning after we heard , liiC horrible rumor of the cannonade of Boston. I never saw a great er effect produced upon ap audience. Iteemed as if Heaven had or dained that Psalm to be read on tnfit mopiing. . ii n"s naa an execei lont effect upon everybody here, r 1 must leg you to read that Psalrdy" ' V:TbPsalm reada; I ,i,'-;r- u'f . 4r ..-u.w.-k v-'j .;-.;;..." ed: deliver me in thy righteousm 3S,S ' '. '-;: ; ; . . "'1 Bow down thine ear to me; deliver me speedily ; be thou my strong rock, for a house of defense to save me - ''! "3, For thou art my rock and my fortress; therefore for thy name's sake lead me and guide me. 4 r I "4. Pull me out of the net that they have laid privily for me; for thou art my strength. '. :, . ' "' 5. Into -thine hand commit my spirit ; thou hast redeemed me, 0 Lord God of truth. , ; , v ; . ' "6. I have bated tberii tnat regard lying vanities ; oui i trust in the Lord. ;';. ;'.,; ''',:'-- "7, I will be glad and rejoiee in thy mercy; for thou hast con sidered my trouble; thou hast known my soul in advoreities. t - "8. And has nothut me up into tho band of the enemy: tbou hast set my feet in a large room. . w : ' "9. Have mercy upon me, 0 Lord, for I am in' trouble; mine eye is' cousumed with grief, yea, my soul and my belly. . "10i For my life is spent with gnei, ana my years witn signing; my strength faileth because of mine iniquity; and my bones are con sumed, '11, I was a reproach among almine enemies, but especially amang my neighbors, and a fear to mine acquaintance; they that did see ma without fled from me. , M5 T am fnrirotten as a dead man out of mind: I am like a broken Vessel. v . - , , "13. ' For I have heard the elandcr of many; fear was on every side; while they took counsel together ajairistme;they devised Intake my life. .,.'' "14. But I trusted in thee, 0 Lord ; I said. Thou art my God. "15. ' My times are in thine hands; deliverme from the hand of mine enemierf, and trom them that pros cute the. . . . ' . "16. Make thy face to shine upon thy servant; save me for... thy mercies' sake. "17. Let me not be ashamed, 0 Lord;, for I have called upon thee; let the wicked be ashamed, and let them !hj silent in the grave. " ,' . "18 Let the lying lips be put to silence; which speaks grevious things proudly and contemptuously agahist the righteous. ; v ' "19 Oh how great is thy goodness, which thou hast laid up for tliw which thou hast wroueht for them that trust in ""I ' " W ' thee before the sons ' of men 1 - "n Thou shalt hide them in the secret of thy presence . from the pride of man; thou shalt keep them secretly in apavillion from the strife of tongue. x " ' - "21. Blessed be the Lord; for he hath showed me his marvelous L-inrtnpis'ln a strone city. ?22, For I said in my haste, I am cut off from before thine eyes; nevertheless thou heardest the voice of my supplication's when I cried unto thee. "" "23. s C love the Lord, all ye saints"; for the Lord" prcserveth the faithfuf, and plentifully rewardeth the proud doer. "24. Ee of good courage, and he shall strengthen your heart, al ye that hope in the Lord."- . - "After this," continues Adams in his letter, to his'wife. "Mr. Duche. unexpectedly to everybody, struck out into an extemporaneous prayer, which filled the bosom of every man present. ' I must confess A marriage of interest to many friends' was that quietly solemnized on Monday morning at 11 o'clock at the parsonage of the First Baptist Church when Miss Mildred Roberson became tbe bride of Mr A. S. Warren Dr. Robert J. Bateman, the pas tor of the First Baptist Church officiated in the presence of a few intimate friends. - ' The bride wore a log cabin tan traveling suit with corres ponding accessories and her cor sage was of Kiljarney roses and eras. Immediately following the nuptial service. Mr. and Mrs Warren left for a honey moon in the South and will visit Atlanta and various cities. Upon their return to Asheville they" will be at home to their friends at 14 Albemarle Road , Mrs. -V.arren is a graduate llUlOVy XI CI TAJIK WU11CUU UW , . t - . t training in the Mission Hos- uai otntt win una , xne pen- pi tal in the class of 192L Since Miss Roberson, Bride, of l!r. Warren, Holiday The State Pension -Board k&a given the Clerks of Superior Court' -tie following Instructions in regari , te ike dlievery of Pennon Waw 5 I , No peisicn. Warrants are to. bewailed to any body,' any where. ', ' t. If the person drawing a pes- sloa is unable to' coma to the court keuse for their pension, they must apaelnteoweone to cerae for theU ; aad that person must maie'afSdaV " ': vitl that the pensioner, is atill Iiv- ' lei. baV unable to earns to tke ': Mrt keui fer tktir pnUa and k'aa appdbtod them as ; their agent ' ;; aatf fkat they will deliver tbe pea tUn VarVant t the paasloner. I. If th person drawing a pen- ' ! slaii Km sBoved out of the county ' . ...... v- t , tk shirtt must return ihe pensioa V : warrat!to tkr ofiea at RaWgfc, , that time she has held several places of responsibility. "A Mr Warren is a member of the firm of the Citizen Electric Company! Asheville Citizen. The following announcement has been received : . , Mr, and Mrs. George E. Roberson announce the marriage of .. : . their daughter . : Mildred ' V '";' V to. . . Mr.1 Adha Stevenson . Warren onMn3ay Dec. twenty-fourth nineteen hundred twenty-three , ".Asheville North Carolina MIssHattie Roberts who has been attending school at Ander son College, ; Anderson, S. C, has been spending the holidays at the home of her parents, Mr and Mrs. W. M. Roberts. sita warrant to tht clerk ef coarl ia Ike elonty where the pensioner J is aw living to be drfivered by , that eierk to the proper persoa, . 4.'" II tke person drawing a pen sioa ba died the widow?, or her agent, or if there be n widow, tna next f kin mast come'before . the elarlc and make affidavit that tha peaateaer is dead, and! : that they are eatitlad to tbe pemion warraiA,.. ' Yours tni!y, ' ' C. A. HAYWE3, : - ClerV Superior Courts It 'aever frightened a Poritaa, whn you bade him stand still and listen to the speech of pod. , Ilia cieaet rfnd his ehurch were full of tha reverberations of the awful, ; gracious, beautiful voice for whica. he liatebed. Phillip" Brobics. it I never heard a better prayer,' orxne so pronounced. Episcopa-1 The National Ucpubi.caa iari as he is, Dr. Cooper himself never prayed with aueh ferver, such ; ; ardor, such earnestness and pathos, and ' ia language eo elegant and ublime." : r: : W :- y1- ;-;.'' In writing of 'this event an his!oriaa ikys: "It .'.must have been an interesting tcenc, a minister bound to forms, finding extemporane ous word to suit the occaasion, and the Quaker, the Presbyterian, the Episcopalian and the Rationalist-Bome kneeling, (some standing, but all prayins and looking to Heaven or wisdem ani tcouhsel" in thuf hour of doubt, anxiety and responsibility. J Adams phd bherman, tn 'uritans. standing erectThomson the Quaker; fiad,ng the movement of the Spirit in the words of a consecrated priest with Washington , Henry and other Episcopalians, kneeling, a c e 0 r d i n gf to then creed, and all invoking wisdom from tbeve, would make a touching i and bstructive picture. Its morals would be, that the greatest minds, ' in moments of difficulty and danger, aekaowledge their dependence upon God, and feel the, necessity of elevating and ": purifying their hearts by prayer; and that the diffierenees'of sect, the distinctions of 7. form, all vanish when emergency preesee upon the consciences, of men and forces them to a sincere and open avowal of their- convictions." Daniel Webster many years later, bit describing this seene on the ; floor of the United States Senate, said: ; At the meeting of the First Coneress. there was a doubt in the minds of many about the propriety of opening the sessions with prayer; and the reason f assigned was a kliere, the great diversity of opinion and re!;'ous belief ; uittil at last and with an impressive yenerableness noar soldom to be "met with (I suppose owing to different habits,) rose; ia that Ksembly, and, ith the air of a pertect runian; saia, ii cuaaat oeroinw.mtsn pryieuius m be Christian men; who bad come tojgetisrfar solemn deliberitf on in the hour of their extremity, to say thera was so wide V dlere-- 3 i ther relieious beliefs that they could net ts one man, bow the kr. 3 u prayer to the Almighty, whose advise tsi t;sLtizie .they - hope 1 ( obtain ; nd,lndependent as be was, ail ti enemy' to all prelacy aa he was known to beFhe moved that Rev, I Ir. Douche, of the, lpiMcr; I church, should address the Throne of C- a in prayer.' I.r. read the Episcopal service of the church cf L. : -land; and t.- ; moved by the occassion, he broke out iito ; extes'jorasec and those men who were about to rc::t ta fcrca to cL'-a t were moved to tears; and 'Coods of 1 ---J ta 'raa t! dheek8 of pacific. Quakers, ho for. '. a ; -(ft t i:1 sembly and depend upon it, that v 3 1. .. jiii. :dt tt ty there is a spirit. which r' s above l 3, tlavs cere nonrlont nf twc.t or creed ar. 1 the col. . . ... j i ' e' F""- : . . , . , . .-3 i: J . -
The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.)
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Jan. 4, 1924, edition 1
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