Newspapers / Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.) / June 3, 1914, edition 1 / Page 1
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urn f ".i,? , .f--...s, v A Home Newspaper Published in the Interest of theeopie: ah Governmental Afiairg, Vol. X Salisbury, N. C. Wednes JUNE 3RP.J9I4. I vm. H. 8Tt wart, Editor , , ... . i a ; n -" i ji ' i nnii r -. . - ii ' - j - . -i "i '- -i i .,, i i - - ,i - - -. vSEj . 1 UK' f ft UTE HEWS ITEMS. Matters gf News Gath red m Condensed for ibe Readers of This Paper. .Western Bur well, sou of HH-Bar well of Washington, D. (Jt was last seen by friends near Paruco, Mexico, seveial weeks ago. It is. reported now that he and his guide were executed as spies. Mr. Bur well is of the North Car olina family of that name. He is said to be akin .to W R Burweirof Charlotte,. . The plans tor t he: new Catholic hospjtl in Charlotte are about completed, and bids will be invitad for the " coustrjiction of the buildings. The main building will be built first and will have room for about 40 beds and is ex pected to cost $50,000. Provi sion is made for two wings to be added at some subsequent time, which wiJl extend the hospital to contain 75 bedsall told. Of course a number of these beds are in the wards. We are glad to note this is being railed a Catholic hospi tal, for people will not he mis ledvas to its idenity. , Wkshinston,June 1 Con gressman John H Small was today reno.oaatel at. Eden ton to represent the First Congressional District in Con gress This is the ninth timef that IVfr. Smill has been hon ortd with the nomination. He is now the senior member of the North Carolina" dele gation and member 6i 4he Rivers and Harbor ommit tee. , Paris, June 1. The French Cabinet, under the fremier-. ship of Gaston Doumergue has decided to resign The resolution was reached at: a Cabinet Council today; ,The Cabinet will meet tomorrow to draft a statement explain ing' the reasons for its retire ment. Frankfort, Ky., May 31. Gov. James B McCreary an nounced late last night that on June 16 he wculd name Johnson N. Camden of Wood ford County, chairman of the Democratit; State Executive Committee, Uuited States Senator t3 fill tha vacancy caused ''by thef tdeath of Sen ator W O Brarlley, Repabli ca'n. Mr. Camden, it is stat ed, will be a candidate for the. short term which will begin with November elec tions and end March 4 1915, when the sixyear jterm of "Senator BradieJwould have ended. feit.- Chapel Hill 'May'rThat the Board of Trustsof the University of North Carolina in annual meeting at Caapel Hill this wee; will be asked to acupdn ,the resignation of Dr. Francis Preston Veua ble as president of the instit ution has been substantially verified. Letters to three members of the iaculty from Doctor Venable imparted the information that he had al ready forwarded h&rasigna- '-tionj to iJjv l- a -' Ratem'&V' cretar v oTher t'rusteejs; The letters to h s co-labof era intheUuiversity announcing positively that he had retired, as executive head of Ibe University bore the postmark of 'May 14 and were mailed from" London, where he is briefly sojourning on his return trip fromEurope . whither he went lajt August on a year's leve of absence. Doctor Venable and family will saiLsoon for New York cj j r . city and thence, -to Chapel Hill- arriving on. or about June 10. Cures Stwbbarn, Itchy Sk'n Troubles. "I ' oonld BCratch tnysslf to pipces l? (iftea heavd from nof- fera of E.zatnf,' Tetter, Itch and similar rikiuf Ernptinna. Don't Scratch 3sop the Itchiuj? at ouce with Dr: fobam'a Eczema O.nt mens. -Ijft firsfe application etarta beahru the Red, R ua;h, Soaly, ltchniff Skia is soothed by the Ha'ing and Cjoliug Medicines. Mrs. G A Einfeldt. Rock Island, 111., affor asiug Dr. Hobeon's Eczema Ointment, writes: ''This is the first tim in Dine years I have been tree from the dreadful ailment ". Guaranteed. 50o., at your Druggist. DECLARE ROMAN THEOLOSY OBSCENE Literal Quotations From Alptioesus Llga orl, a ROnish Saint, is Ob cane Literature. Mies A'-ua Lwry, tha ex nun whose bcok, "The Martyr io Black," and whose successful lee tare tourp hav9 driven the priest hoed and sisterhoods to despera tion, was arrested at Rnshford, Mfnn., by police officers from Wi nona .on the charge of having used obscene lat-guage in a Wino na addsesa about, two months be fore the date of the arrest. At the trial, which resulted in onviotiou on May 16, the judge begSrthe . piccoediiigs with the anno u nbe me n t that there were onlyiwo things foriha court to decidwhethSr tfift-words alleged to-oe poRen,ware.pb8C3ne or not, and whether Miss Lowry used thorn. Since Miaa Lowry did not denyjquoting the saint, the real issue hnog wdolly upon the ques tion as to whether the unspeak able and unprintable questions prescribed by Liguori for priests to ask pentinents in the oohfes sional could be legally quoted in a public assembly. Th9 trial tp solved itself into an investigation f Romish theology, and the con vigtion of Miss Lowry was iu reality a conviclion of Liguori -nd his church of prescribing questioLS for the confessional that are mdocent aud obscene. Miss Lowry will take the ques tion of her own culpability to the eupreme cdurtv-of Minnesota on ippeal ; and that .august tribunal ..will have the opportunity to pass 3n , the question of whether an American citizeu' should be pun laed for merly exporiag the ob oenitiea of Rome. If it is wrong o quoe the language of Liguori, is it right for the same language o be uttered by a bachelor con fessor to female pentinents in the privacy of the confessional? 7 ...If the law of the laffd ia prop erly iuvoked to prevent the pub lic utterance of indecent language why may the same law not oper ate to prevent tha private utter .auci of the sam? language in the .0'?ufe?sionat? If the words of daint Liguori arjauht to repeat to repeat fche women, Toi whom they are intended, in a x priv ate closet? lhese and many other related questions will occur to sensible peoDle whose atten- ion is attracted rjy this trial. The njore that is said and writ- tea aisd , thought about the ua- qaotable'lucubrations of Liguori, D-ins, et al , the better informed the public will be, and tha more contempt will be felt for an alleg ed church which raises such as Liguori to the distinction "of a jaint and defiles its own member ship with the putrid prescriptions -of that mental monster and sex ual pervert. Miss Lowry will suffer the slings and arrows of the outrageous priests, but the public will get the benetn of her die-, closures. But suoh incidents as this make up the pages of history that reaord the long struggle of the people againBt poverty, free dom against falsehood and light against darkness. Tbe priests would have served their own purpose better had-they let Miss Lowry s statements gms without challenge, and not have compelled her to prove to the world what was stated to a limit ed audience. Truly, The Lord miketh the wrath of man to praise Him; aod the anger of Miss Low ly 's persecution is the most , effec- - " - UTGlHiiint N3ffl;nateil Foi SjI icltor. ' - , The Democratic judicial con vention, held in Salisbury Thurs day nominated Hayden Olement, Esq , of Salisbury for solicilr by acclamation. The .following exe cutive committee lor the district was named: L T Haitsell of Cabarrur county, Jacob Stewart of Davie, John G. Lswis of Iredell, B. V. Howell of Montgomery, H M. Worth of Raudolpb, W. H. Woodson of Rowanr Mr. Levis was elected chairman of the com mittee and Mr'. Woodson secre-r. The meeting-was well atte2fed and Mr. Olement's numerous friends will.be glad to learn" that he ha9 thus been honored. He will make a creditable officer. t- Ghamb arlafn's Cole, Cholera and Olanhoea Remedy. Every family without exception should keep tnis preparation at haoduring (he summer mouths. Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Lnarrnoaa Kerned j is wortn many times its cost wneu needed aod is almost certain to be needed before the summer is over. It has no superior for the purpose for whiob it is intended. Bay it now. For Sale by All Dealers. 909 PERSONS PERISH IN ST. LAWRENCE. Canadian Pacific User Rammed by Collier and Goes Down io 15 Minutes. Rimouski, Quebec, May 29. Sinking in 90 feet of water within 15 minutes after being rammed amidships in the upper reaches of the St. Lawrence River early to day, the Canadian- Paoific liner Empress of Ireland carried - down with bar more than 900 of her passengers and orew. Of the 1,877 persons on board the liner, only 433 are known to have been savd- making the probable death list 934 Looming up thiough the river mists, as the Empress of Ireland was lying to, waiting for the fog to lift or day to break, the Danish collier Storstad crashed bow on into the side of the big Canadian liner, striking her about midway of her length and ripping her side open clear to the stern. - The crash oocurred not far from the shore off Father Point, 150 miles from Qaebec, which the Empress of Ireland left yesterday afternoon bound for Liverpool and ten miles from this point on the St. Lawrence. In reality there fore, although the liner was head ing for the sea and the ooJlier oowing in from it, the disaster was not one of the ooean but of the river. Unlike the Titanio'a victims , the Empress of Ireland's lost their lives within sight of shore, in land-locked waters. Immediately the ships crew re covered from the shock of the collision and when it was seen that the liner had received a vital blow a wireless "S. O. 3.V call was sounded. The hurried appeal was picked up by the Government mail tend er Lady Evelyn here and the Gov ernment pilot boat Eureka at Father Point, and both set out to the rescue. So deep was the hurt of the Empress, however, and so fast the inrush of waters, that long before either ot the rescue boats could reaoh ' the scene the liner had gone down. Only floating wreckage and a few ! life boats aod rafts from - the steamer, buoying up less than a , hef, were to be found; - 1'he test had sunk with the Jiner, had; been crushed to death iu the Storitad's impaat with her, or had beenforc ed from exposure in the ice chill ed waters to loose their hold on bits of wreckage and had drowned. Oaly a few persons were picked up by the Storstad, . which: was badly crippled herself, and these were brought here by the collier as were those a'aved by the Eureka and the-LaJfy- Evelyn. Tjpfoty two of the rescued died from in jury or exposure. The others, most of whom had jumped into the boats or plunged into the water from the sinking iner soantly clad, were givn such clothing as the town could supply, and later those who could travel were placed on board a train and started for Quebec. Aojounts agree that in the brief space of time, not more than 15 minutes, between the shock of the collision and the sinking of the line? there was little ohance for systematic marshalling of the passengers. Indeed, everything indicates that hundreds of those on the steamer probably never reached the decks, Few women were among the saved, not mre than a dozen, the lists make it appear. . ''It all happened so quickly we did not really know what was go ing on a ad nobody had time to ory 'Women first,' " one of the passengers told Captain Bellinger of the rescue boat Eureka. ' "The Btewaads did not have time to rouse the people from their berths," the survivor added. 'Those who heard the frenzied calls of the officers for the pas sengers to hurry on deck, rushed up, piled into the boats, which were rapidly lowered and rowed away. Many who waited to dress were drowned. The horror of the interval dur ing the time the Empress was fill ing and the frightened throngs on fjpard her wera harrying every ef fort to escape before she sank was added to by, au explosion which quickly followed the ripping given the liner jby the Storstad's bowv According to one of the rescued, .. d 1 - 111 fcae explosion prooaoiy was caus ed by the water reaching the boil ers, bulged the liner's sides and oatapulted persons from her decks out into the sea. The ship's heavy hit as water pouring in weigatea ner on toe siae Bue. was struck made the work of launch ing boats increasingly difficult and when she finally took her plunge to the bottom scores' still left on her deoks were carried down, only a tew being able to clear ner suns ana nod support on wreckage. - , From all accounts Cantain H G. Kendall, of the Empress o BLIND TIGERS IN DAYIDSON W. Lester Daiis Seotenfcl Ti EigUiea EigHiiea Months for Retailing. ;- Lexington, May.28-W.. Lester Davis of Tyro .Township - ; a brother-in-law of the iate H Olay Grubb, and a citizen jbf consider able wealth " and standing in Davidson Oounty, was yerfterday senteuoed by Judge HJ. P ;yLant, to serve 18 months or the gpablio roads of Lexington Tdwnsiip for selling liquor. Davisf was&found guilty of reoeiving four barrels of whiskey in a single shipment on March 80 at the Liuwood station in this oonuty. 7 v There are several other ..oases against him and the ttalamooi received by him at tqe same sta tion during the past ytari accord ing to the records of the railroad and the express company, is about 10 barrels. All of this the law allows. -i ? ' Mr. Davis immediately gave notice of appeal and bond was fixed at $4,000. Adding to this the bonds required in the other oases against him, he is under bonds aggregating $5,000 for his remaining within the jarishdio tiou of the oourt . He gave these bonds readily, -He isf a man of considerable wealth, ; owns two automobiles, farming lands etc. This term of oourt, which; is now drawing to a closf. has been extremely hard on th tigers". Judge Lane has bea dealing with them in no Jtalf-hearted fashion and it is the big offender that he has been the hardest on. When oourt openecf Monday morning word came that Mr. Davis was too ill to appear in court. Judge Lane sent Dr. E. J. Buchanan, county ; pnysioian, and Dr. D. J. Hill, .to the Davis home to make an examination. They reported that there was nothing seriously wrong and Mr. Divis drove his car to town. When the oase of John Oarrick of Healing Springs Township was called he, too, was reported too sick to oome to ooarticDrBuoh- auan Mr.-Oarr was tried and oonyiotad. John Hill of Thomasville tried the dodge but again Judge Lane was "from Missouri" and Hill came to town along with the Sher iff and Oounty Physician Bush anan. Dffalness Cannot B Cured by local applications as they can not reach the diseased portion of the ear. . There is only one way to cure deafness, and that is by constitutional remedies. Deaf ness is caused by an inflamed con dition of the mucous lining of the Eustachian Tuba. When this tube . is inflimed you have a rumbling sound or imperfeot hearing, and when it is entirely. closed, deafness is tha result, and unless the inflammation can be taken out and this tubs restored to its normal condition, hearing will be destroyed forever; nine casss oat of ten are oaused by Ca tarrh, whioh is nothing but an inflimed condition of the mucous surf toes. We will give One Hundred Dol ars for any case of Deafness oaused by oatarrh) that oannot be oured by Hall's Catarrh Cure. Send for circulars, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo. O. Sold by Druggists, 75o. Take Hall's family Pills for con- stipation. Mr. Smith's Serious Injury. Lem Smith, of Barringer township suffered a serioos injury Monday aftarnoon while assisting in unloading a heavy steel beam for a bridge at the Lingle place, four miles east of town. The beam struck his right leg. just above the ir: nee and the knee was literally split open, the bone be ing badly crushed, Mr. Smith was taken to Salisbury Monday night and placed in a hospital for treatment Statesville Landmark. Ireland bore himself like a true sailor. He retained suoh com mana ot tne situation, it appears fhat while the stor'tad s stem still hung in the gash it had made in the Empress side,. Oaptain Kendall bnagged the master of the collier to keep his propellers go ing so that the hole might remain plugged. The storstad, however telroppsd back and the Empress filled and foundered; Oaptain Kendall stood on his bridge as the ship went down. A boat picked him up and he direct ed its work of Saving others unti Ltne cratt was ioauea. rne cap- ttam was injured and suffered from exposure ous nis nurse are not dangerous. - ! WATSON A6AIN INDICTED BY ROMANISTS f For Qaotlng From the Tbeoloeical Works ; " of toe Roman Catnollc Chared. , No sooner had Priest Bdssman, ot-Wheeling, W. V. instituted suit against The Menace in the Federal Oourt at Joplin, than the news reached us that Tom Watson, editor of Watson's Magaiine and the Weekly Jeffrs?nran, .Thorn son, lis., had been .indicted for the seoond time on the charge, of using the United States mails for her fraHsmisiinn of obsoQe litera ture. , It would appear that Tom Wat- ' Jl mi r i-V - sou ana xne menaoe are causing the hierarchy mere worry thsBe days than any other obstacle or combination of obstacles in etsiit enoe, and that the priests and pre lates of Rome are staying awake nights trying to oonooot some method that will effeotually ohunk sne wneeis ot tne great jugger nauts at Aurora and Thomson which are grinding the idols of Borne to powder. Mr. Watson's first trouble with thecourts after he started his MnTpaign against the Roman uavnouo political maonme oaoc on June first. 1912, when he wa arrested on a warrant issued by United StateV District Attornev, Alexander and Aokerman, charg ing hiffiCvwith sending obsceiie matter throtutbithe mails. The indictment in the first case was fathered by the Knights of Mob and Murder, and for months and months' they made a great flourish of trumpets about Wat son's arretand howled long and loud about now Kome wa3 goicg to vindicate herself and put Wat son behind the bars. Instead ot silencing Watson, at they evidenty hoped to do with this proseoution, they only helped to put him in fighting trim, and from that day to to this, in every issue of his two publications, he His poured volley after volley of truth into the camps of Rome un til she is again forced to make an another demonstration in order to pacuy ner aupea ana aoia.admiQ present one is cased on quotations whioh Mr. Watson make from the Roman Gatholio theological works of Dens and Ligouri, being ques tions whioh priests are required to put to the mothers, wives, sisters and daughters of Roman Catholio parishioners in the "sacred" con confines of the oonfessional box. After about a year and a half of blunder and bluster on the part of the KoightB, Watson's first oase in the Federal Court came to an abrupt end when, on Ost. 21, 918, Federal Judge, Rufus F. Foster, sustained the motion of the defense to quash the indict ment, virtually declaring that no aw had been violated. A telegram from Mr. Watson to TheMeoaoe states that the pres ent indictment is based on tin same old quotations whioh he made in good faith from the theo ogioal works mentioned above, used in the confessional of the Roman Catholic churoh and taught priests in Riman Catholic theological sohools and colleges. The fsct that men are being in dicted, and some convicted, for quoting the questions of priests put to womeu of this county in the confessional is a damning in dictment of Roman Catholio the ology. This accounts for the faot that thouiands of Roman Catho lie fathers are learning why their daughters oome away from the oonfessional in tears and why! they are refusing to make them return as they once did. The time is coming, in faot, when even the fathers who still cling to the oonfessional will demand the right to aooompany their daught ers on suoh oooasins and protect them from the insults of rum soaked libertines who posejia re presentatives of (jurist and at tne same time use language in the presence of female parishioners whioh the lew will not allow us to use in newspapers. ' Mr. Reader, how would you like to belong to a churoh whose the ology is so vile that it is not al lowed to be printed aud transmit ted through the United States mails? Ever stop to think of it? The Menaoe. Law of tha Church on Marriage, "Oaly those marriages are val id which are contracted before a parish priest." Pope Piub X., August 2. 1907. "A civil marriage is only lioens ed cohabitation. There should beno suoh legal abomination, and tfc'Yctiurob should' be suprl&e fugge of the marriage relation." Western Watohmao, March 28, 1912. Germany defied the pope to ap Jly this monstrous edict in her dominions. AmMrioa permits theIpope 4o PP!ly lfrw laid homes are being wreoksd and,-? broken up daily throughout the country . And what do.yoa propose to do sbout this? . Heres a oonfiiotioa with oar marriage laws. Man kato Morning Journal. r BaffllfltSoolsgt KParrjtorK " The following is a copy of a notice said ta have been displayed in a Mexican j churoh some time last winter. No wonder the Mexi can .people are tired of pop ry and determined to rid their coun try of lottery promoting priests. BAFXXK F R. SOULS . At the last raffle for souls the following numbers obtained the prizesand the lucky holders may be assured that their loved ones are forever released from the flames of purgatory and ushered into heavenly j oy s . ."Ticket 41. The soul of Mad ame Oalderon is made happy for ever. "Ticket 762. The soul of the aged widow Franoetca de Parsons, ; foreve- released from the flames f purgtory. ' ; Auother rafflv qr souls will be leld at this same iessed Church f the Redeemer on January 1st, a which four bleeding and tor--ared souls will be released from mrgatory to heaven, according 50 the four highest tickets in this uost holy 1 jttery. Tickets, $1.00, to be bad of the father-in jbarge. Will y;u for tlie poor mm of $1.00 leave your loved ones so burn in purgatory for ages? HiVk Out at MargiQton One to Calhalic Pressori. Morganton, N. C. May 8. Re ligions differences are said to lie at the bottom of the walk-oat at the Morganton Furniture company's plant Wednesday, when 28 men in the ; finishing department struck on aosouutof the refuial of the mauagenient to discharge the general j foreman. The assist ant foretuanin charge, ofthe Ann hr tha Na Tatmnt fimid Aetd ih ttfe hail the place . This was done, but I acoording to the assistant f ore-1 man, J. O. Laughndge, the fore- man has been growing more ex-I acting aucapraoious in hts de-1 mands evsr since. Wednesday ne, Laughridge,. determined to throw up his job unless the other mm was discharged. When the' com pany supported ths general fore man 27 otner men, without any previous organisation or agree ment followed Liughridge. Gazette News. Oepeoils oo tbe eaieroauet Oitair Car- ranza Is Represented at Ciafareao. N.agara Falls, Out., May 31 Upon the Washington Govorn- ment depends whether the medi tators will reoeive representatives of the Mexican Constitutionalists The Sjuth American envoys, it beoame known tonight, virtually have resolved to go ahead with their plans for a two-party agree ment between the United States aud the Haarta Government and for the time being ignore the question of Constitutionalists re presentation. . The only thing that might dis turb suoh a course would be a di rect iutimation from the United States that it will withhold ap proval ofthe plans outlined for a new provisional Kovernmmt un ess prompt disposition is made of the subject of Constitutionalst participation. The Mexioan del egateB have bad no conversations with the mmtaten oft tnis point Each side is waiting for the other to make her first move. The Haerta delegates tomorrow ex pect to reoeive Gineral Huerta's aooroval of the essentials of the psaoe plan, together with his ..... opinion on ecrme of the nanus suggested f otittie Vww Govern ment. Th' Amanajia delegates reoeived inform &idu . along this line toda fromsWashinztn but no intima'tidn at to Eow far they should Press the. id!f eot of con sti tutionjirrepsieatation. Hot Wfrt5ir.Taalc and tlsalth Builder Are yo run down Nervous- Tired? Is everything you do an offort? Youo are not laiy you are sick! Your Stomaoh, Liver. Kidneys, and whole system need a Tonic. A Tonio and Health Builder to drive out the waste matter build you up and renew your strength. Nothing better thanE'eotrio Bitters. Start to day. Mrs. Jam)s Danosu, Hay- nesville, Me., writes: '!Oomplet)ly oared me after several dootors gave ms up." &o. and at your uruggist. Buoklen's Arnioa 8alve for Outs. SEVERE HAILSTORM VISITS ST4TESYJUE - - ;.f.f"'-:'.V- Considerable Damage Done to Crops, Maori's Horse Robs Awiy - - .StatesvilleMa7 30, Statesl ville and vicinity experienced the heaviest hail storm since, 1884 this afternoon, ragged stones of ice weighing around an ounce each, failing rapid - ly for 10 or lfl minutes and doing considerable damage. Many are claiming that the stones were as -large as hen eggs, and weighed five or six ounces, but stones that were picked up and-, weighed by your correspondent before the storm had hardly subdued dia not weigh more than an ounce each. Fortunately the storm did not extend over a large territory and the dam age to crops is not large. In Statesville and immediate vicinity, however, fruit and foliage were beaten from the ; trees and garden truck bats tered to the ground, while many little chickens and , other small fowls-were killed. ' Window glass were broken " out a'nd many roofs badly damaged. A number of horses not under cover ran away and in'" one case with - serious results Mrs. M P Moore of Chambers burg TowrBhip, was coming into town and the storm caught her about a mile east of Statesville. When the horse began running she was unable to check him and on Teaching E T A,yerTs store she pulled the horse in beside the store and called for help. Mr. Ayers ran out land caught the horse, but jnot un til after it had turned, the buggy over and thrown , Mrs. Moore andjtljifcte dafighter oriiWr Axeffraid to turn oatithe frantic animal msMJare oeaa ana caueu lor help uatilmeo ill a nearby atOre heardtlcwaaUs and came to' his aid.' Ill the meantime Mrs. T J Ayers ran out and QiHal Ura . Uroi.A anrl hr little girl in getting inside the store. The little girl was not hurt, but Mrs. Moore re ceived a gash on her head and a severe braise on her back. Mr. Ayers mounted his own horse and rode into town to summons a physician, who rushed to the scene in a ma chine and dressed Mrs. Moore's injures. She is not considered dangeroualy hurt. A funeral procession, tnat of a little child of 0 E Ritchie was pa3sing through the bus iness section when the storm came and the teams were hur- riedly drivda to shelter. Education not Prepiratieo for Social Snobbishness Spartanburg, S. C, May 31. Graduates of Converse College were urged by Dr. Howard Lee Jones, pis. tor of the Oitaiel Sou-ire Baptist Church, Charleston, and president-elect of Coker College,, in the baccalaureate sermm delivered today, to show that higher education is not a preparation for social snob lis hue 33, bat fits for a high ideal of f rea democracy. Doctor Joaes' subject was "The Law Which Liberates From Sin and Dath" his text was drawn from the second verse of tbe eighth chapter of Paul's Epistle to the Romans. He declared the new con sciousness of the Christian is a. fraternal fealing for all mankind.exemplined through help given. Most of the Churches of tha city suspeuds Hi., -irf.-. !. ifc. .w win !rTtr j-'xmi)4-'-m: ed their own services to per mit their conjffegations to.V hear Doctor Jones at Converse Auditorium. Always Lead to Better Health. Serious sicknesses start in dis orders of the stomioh, liver and kidneys. Tae best oorraotive and preventive is D;. King's Njjt Life Pills. They Purify the Blood Prevent Ooastioatinn. keep Liver. Kidneys and Bowels in healthy condition. Give voi batter health by riding the system of farm ant ing and gassy foods. Effective and mild. 25 o., at your Drujist. .1 i 11 A 1 -
Carolina Watchman (Salisbury, N.C.)
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June 3, 1914, edition 1
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