Newspapers / The Robesonian (Lumberton, N.C.) / May 19, 1924, edition 1 / Page 2
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"/ JYetfer Gate * ^ Afy CAiMren CaFotneF *0 foe! it ncceKTy to &vo the children calomel or castar o3," aaid _cwt^er to tS . L Hand out it was such a ditUMsting procedure that often 1 lost the coursj: <o gar the don*. "*,nd the chtfditn v.oc:d unt fipl.t against it. , , btess the dtv that 1 teamed of your Liv-o€ax. I fiad that it W* ^0 tea in bilious condition as caio !^e[ and castor od, and the children lovo to take it " Lho hx. a w^etaMs Htjuid propai rat tot!, may he had at any dnt^ store and mat be relied upon for adutts a? we*' dren in cases of indigestion, bt.tous and eiaiilar d^roers. News and Comment ByJ.M. Fleming. The four good churches of which we have the honor of being the un dershepherd and a generous Presby terian brother in Lumberton have made possible for us to attend the Southern Baptist convention in At lanta. The purse ia amp)c and w& ex tend to every kind contributor our heartiest thanks. Sunday the 4th was spent with our people at Bladen union of rotate No. 4 from St. Pauls, and everything was lovbly. Last Sunday found us with our good people at Pleasant Plains church in Columbus county. Strawberry picking, packing and shipping make up the order of live lihood in those parts. Quite a storm passed between Whiteville and Chad bourn Sunday afternoon. It hit Whiteville right hard, but no lives were lost that we heard of. There was much hail in some parts. We see from the papers that L. C. Jenkins was convicted of second degree murder in the Lexington Su perior court last week and sentenced to the penitentiary for 25 to 3,0 years - tin' slain won)an-itad been believ ers in the gospel of Jesus, Jenkins would have been with his wife and children in South Carolina and Mrs. Jones would have been living with he:- husl and in Virginia. How awful is sin! After so many years of blessed companionship as bad existed be tween Mr. and Mrs. Vance Skipper it must have been exceedingly dif ficult for him to part with the dear wife so recently. But her time came to go home and the Lord took her. fn hi}S loneliness and bereavement Mr. Skipper has our sympathy. One of the best men our commu- i aity had, and One of the best mem bers Chestnut Street Methodist} church of Lumberton fellowshipped, and he Masonic lodge was delighted to honor, went away when Mr. John W. Smith departed the scenes and shadows of earth last week. There were no spots on his sun to bedim its brightness and no cloud on his sky to obscure its radianee. Wc had known him personally for many years, and can testify after the truest fashion and in the sincerest degree that he was one of the most devout Christian Isn't it 1-ad? If he and Mrs. Jonea characters it was ever our privilege to know. Ho was a Civil War ve tcran and always attended he re unitin'. when he ws able. He was true i.o the cause there as he was given to know it. He was in the Slst year of his age. The good wife !eft him for. the glory iand somef 20-odd years ago, and he had to be father and mother both for a goodly number of children, in thd whirh^hc was wonderfully successful; He never re married, but he lived the iife of perfect chastity that was made possible by his constant Bible readings anti close fellowship with the Father and the Son through the Spirit. His patience under affliction was beautiful and his submission un der the will of Got! was all that one couid ask this side of the Christian's blessed heaven, where there are no groanings and no tears, no separa tions which call for good- byes. "And Cod shaii wi^e away ali tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any mere pain: for the former things arc passed away". Revelation 21:4. The family of devoted children wish their many friends to know that every act of kindness shown and ev ery expression of sympathy mani fested in their behalf are deeply ap-; preciated. We all know that, dear children, if you hadn't said it. We are! just sorry to be unable to have done! more for you. Next by the way was Mr. W. Q. i Warwick, one of the truest, noblest; and bdst men, if not the best in Wis church, was called away from the! hart township and Antioch Baptist narrow places of earth last week up to the healthful climes and limitless; horizons of the glorious abode of tho ^ blessed. Mr. Warwick loved the j Lord, loved his home, church and j community. It was a great pleasnre I at one time to be his pastor. We "had; unbounded confidence in him, not; because of what he seemed to be You can select a good oil two ways. By mak ing elaborate tests ior yourseli or by asking by name lor a brand that has been tested and accepted by a whole generation oi motorists and engineers. Think oi the time, expense and uncertainty that you save by asking lor "Standard" Polarine. ' * A name is a convenient handle by which the public reaches lor and gets die product it wants. All good motor oils have names. The handle is there for your con venience and protection—use it, please. You never say "Give me a package oi cigarettes" or "a tube oi tooth paste." You know what you like and you askior it— by name. It is to your advantage to buy oil only by name. It prevents substitu tion. It guarantees uniform quality. * There are several good oils, but none any better than "Standard" Polarine. It is the standard among lubricating oils and has been so ior many years. It is still growing in iavor. It is an honestoil.^ STANDARD OIL COMPANY (New Jersey) - * jh*y hs* o# At# Awy & Ay namt— g!M% tAc Wgmt M I * ** SIAN DARD 4 — "Standard-Any typc.mod ok oy taantpia hot com paritonta tritationo! tacaHtn:*."—Funk ^ W aarnUs Practitai Stand atd Dictionary j but because of what he was. He was i a friend to all and all were friends ; to him. If ha had an enemy we never knew who it waa, and if he ever did anything ugly we never heard of it. We know him to have been a devout man and one who loved Jesus. To his beioved wife and devoted sons and daughters who survive, our sympathies are extended most ten deriy. As a eulogy for these departed loved ones, iet us quote these beau tiful lines of Mrs. Barboubl: "Life's labor done, as sinks the clay, Light from its load the spirit fhes, While heaven and earth comibne to say, How bl^st the righteous when he dies'. Sterns Tutts of three KMs o! CeefessiMS _ ! Largest Crowd At Morning Services This Morning—Persona!, Private and PnMic Confessions—Some Evi dences of Confessions In Lumber top—Some Confessions Are Bitter. EMPLOYEE REFUNDS MONEY. "Unconfessed Sin" was the sub ject f a briRiapt and masterful ser mon at the union tabemaeie this morning at 10 o'clock by I^ev. Geo. Stephens. The largest crowij since the mording services were begun Was present to hoar him. Different Kinds of Confessions "Th,ere are 3 different kinds of confession", he said, "private, person al and public". The private confes s;on is absolutely between the sinner and God, he said, and the confessing sinner need not have fear that God will teii it. In regard to the person al confession, Mr. Stephens told of 2 Lumberton ladies who had buried a 3-years-o!d trouble existing between them, that caused them to pass and re-pass without speaking. One went to the other each confessed that she was wrongs and there was a happy reunion. The pubiic confession, he stated, was a confession that had to i be made as puN{!y as the sin was made. There are a led, of confessions that are bitter and that hurt, hht it is act always the bweet medicine that! cur**. He statld that he wouldn't dare preach about something that would huyt someone personally if he knew about tthe [partiiculair sin they had committed. He said that he had been accused of knowing in ad vance of someone's personal sins and then preaching dh that? sin. He gave soma instance where employes of stores had gone to their employers *Tnfa)KHM?..Hnnr sins and refunding 'UUss of money which they had taken either in goods or cash. Only a few iays ago a certain man went to his Former employer, both of Lumberton, and paid him a sum of money that he said he had taken from him while n his employ. The employer always held the man in high respect and thinks more of him now than ever before. He took half of the money the nan refunded and gave it to a mem oer of the finance committee of the HMon meeting. This was one of the best messages ! that Mr. Stephens has brought and ; aracticaily everybody spoke of it as they were leading the tabernacle. It was the general topic of conversa tion during the return to the homes tnd places of business. i Facts about Childbirth ) AN eminent physician has shown to thousands of ex pectant mothers just how to he free from dread, and from much of the Buffering which many mothers expe rience for months, right up to the moment when the Little One arrives I ) Mrs. Wm. Washington, 107 Louise Ave., Nashville, Tenn, aaya: "There ia positively no woman on earth that wouM be without 'Mother's Friend* during expectancy if she oniy knew the vaiae of comfort." "Mother's Friend" is externally ap plied to the region of the abdomen, back and hips. It relieves the tension on nerves and ligaments as month follows month. Finally, it makes chiid-birth a joy Instead of a painful' dread. Use "Mother's Friend" aa our mothers and grandmothers did. Don't wait, start today, and meanwhile write te BradHeld Regulator Co., BA-7Z, Atlanta, Ga., for a free won derful book Mnt.Yntng information every expectant mother should have. Get a bottie of "Mother's Friend" to day. It ia sold ^ aH druggist. taw ita/tcr M aMatatate* appattta and atda dtgeattaa. H* matte* year taaddoyoaaMte nenA Wat* how M reMevea fha! atnMy !ceMng niter hearty entina MR. J. P. PATE DIES IN HOG PEN OF HEART ATTACK Body Found 30 Minutes Later After Hogs Had Partially Mutiiated It— Was Trying To Repair Fence When Stricken—Lived With Son ce Dr. G M Pate's Farm Near Raynham. Mr. J. P. Pate, about 74 years old, was found dead Thursday in a hog pasture on the farm belonging to Dr. G. M. Pate, near Raynham. His body had heen partially mutilated by the hogs in their effort to devour it. Deceased had gpne to the pasture about 9 o'clock and it is supposed that he was trying to repair the fence when he fell inside of the pen cn account of a heart attack. It was fully 3G minutes before he was found. He had been making his home on the plantation with his son, Mr. John Pate, who is a farmer for Dr. Pate. Funeral services was conducted Friday afternoon at Raynham Bap* tist church. Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Creech pass ed through here today en-route to their home in Kenley after spending several days with Mrs. Creech's pa rents, Mr. and Mrs- W. P. ijenkins, R. 3 from Lumberton. Mr. R. L. Owens of Fairmont, R. 1, is a Lumberton visitor )^ay. -r*—y V! i' Bo!! Wwvi! Specialist To M)ress Co-op WeetiMj Dr. B F Brute of Columbia Will Be Principal Speaker At Meeting Here Tuesday-He Has Made A Study Of WeevHsr LARGE CROWD EXPECTED^ At thb regular monthly meeting qf the members of the Robeson County Co-operative Marketing association to be held in the court house here Tuesday morning, May 20, at 11 o'clock, Dr. B. F. Bruce of Coiumbia, S. € , will deliver a lecture on the boll weevii. Dr. Bruce is a speciaiist on the boll weevil and has studied the in .sect since his first appearance in the cotton fieids. A iarge number of the members is expected to .attend the meeting, and the local members con iTCH! M:3HMa*3^'a?rug outre Lumber ton. N. C. sider aw)<E^nata ip Dr. Dnicc to make thy address. TMew v.-H; be othe!; association . officiai who trii! s^nit JtA!!ea,^and the usua! matters of business wiH bt iiandlsd;. ; , , ,t -- " " "* ... .! Mrs. T. A. Norment and brother Mr G. E. Rancke, visited reiatives in Diiion, S. C., yesterday Messrs T. A. and J. H. Lee oi Fairmont R. 1, are Lumberton visi tors today. ' ' # ' Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Spruit anc Miss Nannie McQueen of Whitevii!( spent the week-end here, guests ir the heme of Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Skipper. !;,3S2K ; it *: ).! " ; . ^ ^'' r . ! , ^ M j - - M- ' ^ 1 ( i ) , < ^' i ( ' ' t ' i i </ ' ^^ '<? Carolina CoHege MAXTON, N. C. A JUN!OR COLLEGE FOR Cirls An Accredited Preparatory Department Two Years CoHege Course CONTROLLED BY THE NORTH ^ CAROHNA CONFERENCE Department# of Art, Music, Business, Educa tion, Home Economics, Reiigious Education. FINE ENVIRONMENT OF CULTURED SCOTCH FOLKS. Ideal Climate. New Dormitory. Percentage Failures This Year Less Than 3 PERCENT "The School With The Personai Touch." *m.r T— For Catalogue Address Emest J. Green, Pr^s. ] ' !?*ST -r ' The Coach is Exclusive to Hudson and Essex Gives Closed Car Comforts a^ Open Car JPWce The Coach is a Hudspn-Essex invention. No other type and no other car gives dosed car comforts at so near open car cost. The extra cost of closed modeis on other cars is from %300 up, eveh on the iowest priced cars. More than 135,000 Coaches ate in service. Sales exceed 3,000 every week. Everyone prefers a closed car. The Coach alone is the quality car within reaich of all. No wonder the Coach on Hudson and Essex is the world's largest selling six-cylinder dosed car. The price you want to pay will decide you for Hudson or Essex. The dosed car advantages of the Coach and gs price surely leave no other consideration. Hudson and Essex Are of One QuaMty f Townsend MotorOo., Lumberton, N. C. jj^h PHONE 196 i . t'tH.Tl'i.
The Robesonian (Lumberton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 19, 1924, edition 1
2
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