Newspapers / The Randolph Bulletin (Asheboro, … / Sept. 13, 1906, edition 1 / Page 4
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I HAY FEVER "Having used Peruna for catarrh ana hay fever, I can recommend it to ail who re suffering ivitk ihe above a'iseases. I am happy to be able to say it has helped vie wonderfully" Afisym . Smith. ' :w;. -:-. '...'A'-.sl. -- Kiss ma ymx siirni. -ivy K. Mnu.iii ,sy,vrf, Cn! f: i-.s-, (Jiu. f'T"AY FKVKR i endemic catarrh. Jt is J 1 i-aus.- l I.,- :-.-;,,L i :-j 1 1 s r i r surwtaiu'e in i i!f ai ai.. j. !:;; .!u:-i:.s ;! lu- m:;:;;kt zi.'.jii' h. i: : :. :.v:!:; " lliuvlr ; ( V-V.rn i t tvrt-!;.i v. ,'t!,' ;t:t i r.u-er. i i!:-' t han;- oi lo-: .- t- io 'he oniv l.iii. .-...! i-iire. '; r.e ut IV -una, ho'V-eye;-. j.tiiaii.if l -.. nervo;; sy.-ivm to re- ;.ki .irrcs i h vi.-tiia un-o'ia'si thr !i.i lever seas..u without an attack "of A La-g lir.ri'i!-:' .,i pofple re!" npn Pe runa !.r Mrs crpo.e. Those Iw do not Jtn.i it : - .-i.ir:;- hi vliaic uieir 1 all; n to avoid i;:iv IV w-uld do v.rU in ? h e value to i latsy Bay a bo; tie u 1..- 37,-'05. Ralt for cttoTjIia. At a meeting of the Kansas Fi.nliry Assoclatir.n Mr. E. Ilar":gto!i said: -This fa'.l JK Harringloa t'i-toveiod that the cholera had appoaroi amoiig her chickens. I had heard souu-viipre that there ia nothing to beat salt as a disinfectant. T had the hired r.iaa clean tho huhuuse as clean as he could, wash it ont thoroughly v'Ca just as s'rons brine as he c-Uld make, and fill every crack and crevice with the brine. lie did so, and we haven't lost a hen since. I tried the ssii'i-i thing on my hogs when t'ne choirra broke out among, tntm, and I am sat isfied that I saved a lot of them aad prevented a further spread of the dis ease." FALL, SPRAYING. Bulletin Xo. 254 of the State Ks periment Station, at Geneva, X. Y., holds out a little prospect of relief to the orchardist who finds spring all fee tho-it to allow of thorough spraying of his scale-infested trees. The re sults of ex ten si .e ttsis seem to slicm that fall spraying with sulphur Washes is safe upon hardier varieties of fruit trees and as effective as spring spray ing, so far as scale destruction is con cerned. Some of the washes ie-:d also apyear to promise a shorienia? of time and decrease of trouble in preparation of an effective coir: pound. STILL ALLRT. It was in the juagie res-aurant. The leopard had been drinking and the waiter was tryias to talio advan tage of that drc.iisstacoe. "None of that Mr. Monk!" yelled the fvJine vigorously. "The leopard nay not he able to c'a an.se his spots, liai let me te'.I you that lie is f'.iiiy competent lo spot his change." Cou rier Journal. PERHAPS. "The Chinese do not object to the exclusion law so mrb as to the man ner of its enforcement." "I dare say they'd like to. have v.s enforce it as we enforce our liquor laws." LUG 3. 'I see the 'Society News' is taking nniy millionaires' sons 'n their hoard." "Sert of putting on he'rs, aren't they?" Princeton Tiger. HANDICAPPED. "Lived with five families last week?" ejaculated Mrs. Housekeep. That isn't a very good record." "it v.-uz the best I could do, mum," resv.nded Hie appHcanv. ' I wr.z sir.;; two days." Minneapolis Tribune. HIS REASON. Solomon explained his magic cr.ipet. Tt doesn't show if I forget to wipe Iny feet," he announced. Considering the number of Mrs. S.'s, this as indeed an advantage. liar per'a Rrzar. now :-i:- or us? Fail to Select r'ood Nature Deniaatls , to Ward OS iilmeiits. A Ky. lady, speaklag about food, says: "I wa3 accustomed to eating all kinds of ordinary food until, for soma reason, indigestion and nervous prostration set in. "After I had run down seriously my attention was called to the neces sity of come change in tny diet, and I discontinued my ordinary breakfast and began using Grapa-Nui.3 vritL a good quantity cf rich cream. "In a few days my condition changed in n remarkable way, and I began to have a strensi.li that I had never been possessed of before, a vigor of body and a poise of mind that amazed me. It was entirely new in my experience. "My former attacks of indigestion had baen accompanied by heat flushes, and many times my condition was distressing v-iih blind spells of dizzi ness, rush of blood to the head and neuralgic pains in the chest. "Since using Grape-Nuts alone for breakfast I nave been free from the:;e troubles, except at times when I have indulged in rich, greasy foods ia quantity, then I would be warned by a pain under the isft shoulder blaSe, and unless I heeded the warning (he old trouble would come back, but when I finally got to knjw where these troubles originated I returned to my Grape-Nuts and cream and the pain and disturbance left very qu.ck 17. "I am now in priino health as a, result cf my nt ct Graiis-Nutc." KftSft given by FeSvMia C'e., SattSo THE ?tlLPlT. AN ELOQUENT SUNDAY SERMON By THE REV-. EARL E, CLEELANt. Subject: 'Christ in Gethsemane. Brooklyn-. Y.--Sunday morning, In L'lasson Avenue Presbyterian (Jhurch, the assistant pastor, '. '.ev; Earl K. Clealund, preached tni "Christ in dpthseniaue-." Among other things he sAiii: The test tC which I ask your atten tion is found in the twenty-sixth chapter of Matthew, at the thirty ninth verse: "My Father, if it be possible let. this cup pass away, from Met nevertheless, not as I will, but as Thou wilt," which tre the words, as Matihe v has recorded them, of the .ih.riOe repeated prayer of our Luru in the jdace called Gethsemane. You recall the account of the Last Supper of the Lord with-His disci ples, and the dark rcene in Geth semane which immediately followed. Tellinar the cisc-iples to "sit ye here while I go yonder and pray," Jesus "took with hiin Peter and the two sons of Zebedee" (James and John), "aiid began to be sorrowful and sore troubled. Then saitli He unto tnem, 'My soul is exceeding sorrowful, even hi-to death; abide ye here and watch with Me.' And He Went forward a little and fell on Kis face and prayed, sayi:iK:. 'My Father, if it be possible let this cup pass away from Me; revertheless, not. as T will, but as 1 it on wilt." The gospel according to Luke soes on to tell us that then "ihere appeared unto Him an angel from heaven, .strengthening Him, and being in an agony He prayed more earnestly, and His sweat became as it. were great drops t;C blood falling duvn v):.n the ground." I eiiiM J litis test, to-day as the result of a conversation. son.e ten tlays aw. wi: h cue of the members of this '-,,,1-ch, and a; the pnts-M. I want to acknowledge ray Indebtedness to him for tli 3 t'.issrcclion cf this ser rior. Many passages, in Scripture, are variously interpreted enti differently HndersLood by Christian people, and student? of the Bible especially, RUd "fien one w: ' find that the great cauir-( !i;a; ors tlieiuselvcs ure almost (laiustriraUy piici:;ed to eac'i other in the Uitfi-pi "-eiHtions which they nsft.kc-. 1 finu that our text to-day is one of tios? disiiuted passages. Sev eral of the authoritie-j which I have c-.nsuited in the study of this prayer of Christ in Gethsemane took the view that Jems feared and recoiled at The thought of Ills approaching d- ath on i'ne cross, and thus prayed to i!o;?, Kis Father, trying, if ir were possible, to bend His wiii, and ha v.? the end acflojjiplished by some other way Ulan tne cross. Only one c jiv.i.ientator. as I recall now, took the view vhat our Lord's "agonized prayer was instigated by the over-v-h';;rticg thought that He feared liio !if.'- Would be crushed out under neath the Kirain of mental suffering lie was n tidal-going, before lie reached the cross, and thus He prayed x hat this cup pass away from Him. The Majority of Christian people. X heik-vo, and as i find, hiore of the coiunif.ntators do, attribute Christ's suffering in Gethsemane to the weak ness of His Kesh, or humanity, to face the death that was before Him, ;'"i! i hey interpret our text in this li.ultr. I am inciiued. however; tc cast my lo: with the minority, and interpret Christ's pra;. er as a plea to God for Rrciigth, that His lite would not be crushed out underneath His terrible agony befor-? the time appointed throush all ihe ages of prophecy be fore Hint that of His atonement on the cro.ss for the sins of Dirn. And in treating this passage let it be uu derstood that anything 1 may say has douhilesi been said hundreds of fine beforOi I only wish to try to show, from Scripture, my position, and therefore make tssi claims. 1 s.;e no necessity of exercising our imaginations in endeavoring to show ) ty:;terio-.is causes for our Lord's state cf mind in this prayer, when the reason for His agitation is plainly given in the Scriptural account itself. But now about this prayer of our Lord in the garden of Gethsemane. It seems incredible almoot to think that Christian people will attribute loss courage to the Son of God than they have s'een in hundreds of exam ples of fearlessness through all the centuries past. Thinst of the thou sands of people who have unflinch ingly faced death and died a martyr's death wiih scarcely a quiver. And it would be almost irreverent in us at such a time as this to think of the numerous cases of criminals who walk with unfaltering steps to the electric chair or ascend the gallows with all appearance of calmness. Some commentators, as has al ready been said, interpret this prayer as a revolting or halting of Christ at tho thought of the approaching crucifixion, and the horror? which preceded it, and attendant to it: the betrayal of Judas; Peter's denial, auc. the dessition of His disciples and all His followers; the humiliating trial, and insults of the rabble, and the lingering death on the cross. That it was because of the horrors o! all these things that Christ here meant to ask God if there was not soma other way of atoning for the sins of iron, and that Christ only yielded to the cros.3 to fulfill His Father's will. These who advocate this view would lias make it out that our Lord for got for the moment, by reason of liis Buffering, tho prophecies, and the plan cf God in Kis redemption oi' the world, throughout the history of i.-rael ; or if Christ did not forge; that ila tried to baid His Father's wiii to a.i atonement by. bouis other way, and that Christ finally, after three unsuccessful attempts to bend Cori's will, yielded to tho cross. Why Christian people try to ex plain away this prayer in any znch a weak way is difficult to understand. What does Christianity want with a weak Christ who feared a martyr's death? Our Lord was "a man of sor rows and acquainted with grief," and had been lor three yeaid preparing lor the cross, t'nd had Oil several oc casions before this told His disciples of the manner of His death, and they could not understand at the time. To my mind, this prayer of Jesrs shows, on the contrary, the bravery of our Lord, and does not show any weakness. I am inclined to think that Christ had no thought of the cross during the time in which He made this prayer, save in His remote consciousness; but He was, just at that moment, fearful that His mortal body- would succurAh to the terrible strain He was passing through, dur ing this awful hour in Gethsemane. He felt that Kis life would be crushed out by this terrible agony, before He reached the cross, for ifoes not oue of the accounts tell us Christ's own words, "My soul is exceeding sorrow ful, even unto death," and another that, "being in agony. He prayed more earnestly; and His sweat be came as it wot? rrept drops of bloo.l falling down iijton the ground." And God heard and answered His prayer by sending an an gel from heave;?, strengthening Hiro. Jesus was not. here, seeking to betid His Father's will, but asking God for strength to reach the orosj, and God sent an angel in answer to that prayer. This is tne scriptural account of why our Lord was ,n agon . This cup, which Christ was drinking to the dreg;;, was tho cup of Cud's wrath upon the? sins of nu-n. Christ was drinkinaf the biitorneas of tfe cvin ta our steel. lite ymti? sweat was a Sprinkling, an antici pated .atonement, upon, the , very ground 'which had been "cursed" be cause of man's sin. No' Imagination can feel, no words can describe the agony that Christ had to bear in Gethsemane. So whv nee5 we search our imagi nations and try to manufacture mys terious explanations why Christ made this prayer when the answer and reason for the prayer, is. given in the Vety, account itself; id the necessity fcf the augel appearance? Wh.eii Jesus said; .'not My will, but. Thine; be done,'" He resigned Himself to God's will. If He skjuid die of agony, it was God's will, but e prayed that this cup should pass from : Jm. . But His atoning death was not to be there in Gethsemane, in the night, but He was to be lifted upon the cross of Calvary in order that all men would be drawn unto Kim. We know that Christ's was a sensi tive nature but this is not saying that He was not brave. And thers is no reason to believa that He. in anti cipation of His death, would yield to the thought any more than an or dinary man. So, -therefore; because He suffered "even unto death." as He did, id the Garden 'of Gethsem ane, is in.ttself an argument that He was bearing more than the antici pation. So, therefore, let us not confound Christ's suffering ia Gethsemane to lack of fortitude or bravery. Our Lord was no PtoiC. He here felt that His physical body was giving way under an agony which no language can describe. Throughout the whol Old Testa ment period God, under the Levitical code fe laws, educated His chosen people to the fact that without the shedding- of blood there was no re mission of sins. All these forms of sacri ficial atonement of the sins of Israel v -re typical of Christ; the Lamb of Cod. And can it be supposed for oue moment that our Lord did hot fully realize this in Gethsemane? And throughout the whole New Tes tament, gospel. It is plainly stated everywhere that our peace is through the blood of the cross. Surely then that great Paschal Lamb of God that was to take away the sins of the world did not hesitate nor falter at the anprooach ct ihe atonement by the shedding of IItt blood upon tae cross. It. was for the joy that, . as set before' Kirn that He endured the cross and despised shame, and He wen thereby His seat at the right hand of the throne of God. The staggering of Christ's physical body underneath this tremendous burden ust not be mistaken icr a faltering of His will. The Bible; This Eook unfolds Jehovah's mind. This Voice salutes in accents kind. This Fountain has its Source on high. This Friend will all you need sup ply. This Mine affords us boundless wealrh. This Good Physician gives us health. ' This Sun renews and warms the j soul. ! This Sword both wounds and makes lis whole. This Letter shows our sins for S given. j This Guide conducts us safe to heaven. This Charter has been sealed with j blood. : This Volume is the Word of God. Cod's Bes.r. It is impossible to rush into God's presence, catch up anything we fancy, and run off with it. To attempt this will end iu mere delusion and disap pointment. Nature will Mot, unveil her rarest beauty to the chance tour ist. Pictures which arc- the result of a life work do not disclose their se ( ret loveliness to the saunterer down a gaik-i'y. No charaei.:-r can bo .ead at a glano". And God's best cannot be ours apart from patient waiting in His holy presence, writes thy Re-'. F. P. ils)-. The superiicial mny be put off with a parable, a pretty story, but it is not given to sm-h to know Ihj myoteriea of the Kingdom of Heaven -Ram's Horn. Work on Your Knees, A clergyman, walking on the pub lic highway, cbsc-rved a poor man bvoakii.:, stones, and kneeling the while to that he might, ba aide to do it more effectually. Passing ilia! and saluting him, he remarked: "Ah, John, I wish I could break the stony hearts oi' my hearers as easily as you are breaking those stones." "Perhap?, master," he said, "you do not work on your knees." Prayer brings down the power that can break the flintiest heart. Chris tian Commonwealth. I! vt ijlf d by Love Alone. Intellect may give keeunsss of Sis csrnnient. Lore alone givc-a larg3 r.esi to the nature, soma snare in the cote pr en eusi von ??s at Cod, Join H&'niiion Tncaj. XFAVSY GLEANINGS. One person in each 400 in Ohio is insane. One of the destroyed villages on Vesuvius is to be rebuilt on the same eke. The Government is preparing a fifteen-year program of railway con struction. The German Imperial estimates for 1905 have given a surplus of more than ? 1 , COO, 000. A wireless message told Mrs. Ker mr.n Oflrie.hs. of New York City, that her husband had died at sea. Arr-ablshop Ksune says that Pope Pius X. will not call a ro!.iKto;y to create au Am erica a Cardinal. A company was incorporated iu San Diego. Cal., to buiid a $20,000, 00 0 transcontinental railroad. Edward Rosewater, editor of "The Omaho Bee," was found dead in a courtroom in his office building. Mr. W. J. Bryan was warmly wel comed at New Kaveri, where he re peated his Government ownership program. The Pre tender to the Moroccan throuo concentrated sit thousand troops and prepared to give battle to the Sulfa:'. The Police of Warsaw, Poland, began to search the street cars, cabs, pedestrians, and hundreds of arrests were made. The insurgents of the National Rif.e Association won at the election iu Sea Girt, T, J., and decided to hold the ne:;t meet in Ohio. Chester Gillette, the aliased slayer of Miss Grace Drown, was charged with murder in the first degree by a special grand jury, sitting at Herki mer, N. Y. The Dresdner Bank and the Scbaff hauseu Bankverein, which formed a community of interest, in December, 190:;. have decided to issue $3,000, of new capital. Trees His Monument; A walnut tree and a pecan tree have been planted on the grave of the late Gov. Hogg of Texas, in compliance with his dying request, and after these trees bear fruit, ihe nuts will be dis tributed among the farmers of the Lone Star State for -seed. The request may be considered eccentric in its sentimentality, but it was a trua ex prc.ssioti of an hottest' publicist's at fpeiloii for ihe peopleAtlanta Cfoa Hiillon, fHfe SUNDAY SCHOOL, IJiTERXATIOXAIi LESSON COM MENTS FOR SEPTEMBER 10. Subject: Jesns Silences the Pharisees and 8adducees, Mark sli. 13-27 1 Golden Text; Mark iii.i 17 Membry Verse; 27: 1. A deputation comes to Christ lv. 13). 13. "They." The Phari sees as a whole appointed certain I ones to visit Jesus for the purpose of inducing .Him to say something that would refute His claims as the Mes siah or that would give ground for an accusation against Him before the government. "Certain Pharisees." Matthew says "their disciples." Prob ably young and zealous scholars. "Herodiaus." The Herodians were a political party rather than a relig ious sect. "To catch Him." Mat thew says "entangle Him," A meta phor drawn from catching wild birds. It was their purpose to ensnare Him in His talk so they couid expose His ignorance of the Jewish law or relig ion, or find , grounds for legal pro ceedings against Hire. II. A question concerning bur duty as citizens (vs. 14-17). 14. "Master, we know," etc. This was a hypocritical compliment. They hope by their treacherous flattery to in duce Him to commit Himself to some rebellious sentiment. "Is it lawful?" etc. Caesar was a name common to all the emporors, derived originally from Julius Caesar, the proper foun der of Roman imperialism in the placa of the old republic. The pres ent emperor was Tiberius. The trib ute was a poll tax, or levy of a dena rius upon every person, imposed by the Roman Government ever since Judea had become a province. The Jews detested this tax; but its legal ity w as supported by the Herodians. Their questiehi was so framed that it seemed impossible for Him to es cape. 15. "Knowing their hypoc risy." Jesus, who knows the hearts of all men, saw that they were mere fattering spies, and their question only a crafty device of hypocrites. "Why tempt?" Why do you seek to ensnare Me by a question that is asked, not. for information, bat to get Me into trouble? "Bring Me a penny." Literally, a denarius. 16. "They brought It." By re quiring them to bring Him the coin He compels them to answer, tacitly, their own question; for the Jewish rabbis taught that, "wheresoever the money of any king is current, there the inhabitants acknowledge that king for their lord." "Whose im ago." The image was probably the likeness of the Roman emperor; Ti berius Caesar. "Superscription." The name and motto on the coin. "They said Caesar's." Thus ac knowledging that they were submit ting to Caesar's authority. 17. "Render." The word render implies the notion of moral duty to ward Caesar quite as much as to ward God. "To Caesar." Rather, here, give back to Caesar. They ask, Is ic lawful to give? He replies, give back. Since they accented in the coinage of Caesar the benefits of his government; they were bound td give back a recompense iii tribute. So long as the citizen accepts the benefit of a government, he owes it alleg iance and obedience. JIT. A question concerning our relations in the-future state (vs. 18 '27). IS. "Sadducees." They were tho materialists of their time. "No resurrection." They also dented the immortality of the soul and the ex istence of angels (see Acts 23:8). "They asked Him." Their question was full of scorn and ridicule. They intended to show from Moses teach ing that the doctrine of the resurrec tion was absurd. 19. "Moses wrote." In Deut. 23:5. G. "Should take his wife," etc. The children were to be reckoned with in the gen ealogy of the deceased brother. -0. ''Seven brethren." This was no doubt n,n imaginary case. The Sadducees assume that the resurrec tion includes the revival of the rela tions now existing. 23. 'Tn the res urrection." Which of the seven hus bands should have the risen wife. 2 4. "Do ye not err." To err means to wander. They do not mere ly make a mistake, but they wander in ignorance of the Scriptures. "Ye know not." You err because you do not know (1) the Scriptures, which affirm thi3 doctrine; nor (2) the power of God, which is able to effect the resurrection, and after the resur rection to create a new order o things in the new world. "Power of God." The Bible rests the doctrine of the resurrection on the exercise of divine power (Acts 26 :S; Rom. 1:4; 1 Cor. 6:14). 25. "When they shall rise." That Is, after they have risen from the dead in the future state. "Nor are given." This has reference to the Jewish custom by which the female members of the family- were given ia marriage by the father, "Are as angeis." This an swer strikes at another error of the Sadduceea a denial of the existence of angels. 25. "Book of Moses." The Sadu cees had appealed to Moses as au thority and now Jesus turns to the same source to prove His poiut. "In the bush." See Exod. 3:5, 15, "I am," etc. Notice that the present tense Is used. He cannot be the God of non-entities, non-existences. If He is their God they are His people, and, of course, must be in existence, and not out of existence. So the whole Sadduc.ean doctrine broke down. 27. "Not the God of the dead." Our Lord here uses the word dead in the sense of these Saddu cees with whom Hs is conversing, to signify eipuct. HOUSEHOLD HINTS. Turpentine and beeswax melted to, hG consistency of thin cream makes"' a fine polish for leather upholstered furniture. Moisten the hem of a lace cr mus lin curtain very slightly with a nail or toothbrush, and the rod will slip in easily. Serviceable yet handsome towels are made of hncl.abuck, with one or two insets of heavy torchon lace above hemstitched two-inch hem. If alum is added to the paste used in covering boxes with paper or for scrapbooks moths or mice will not invade them. All kitchen and pantry shelves should be painted both top and bot tom, and if white enamel paint is used, pauer can be dispensed with. Sh-emakeri "f-prigs" a variety of headless tacks, should be used to fas ten down linoleum. They hold firmly yet are invisible, 3. id do not harm the linoleum. Almost as good as "cold slaw" is grated cucumber well seasoned. A mixture of salt and vinegar is as good for cleansing the inside of flow er vases that have become discolored as it is for brightening brass. Bo you wash and scald your refrig erator often? The chances are that you o not do so- .rfteu enough. HER WIDE EXPERIENCE. . Dottie I wonder if a blonde is ijiore attractive to puen than a bra ;e!iO? Ixjttio Ask Toitie; shy's hrOfl i""?? I Late flebuf In 'Brief MINOR MATTERS OF INTEREST The city of Sumter, S. C:, suffered from it $100,000 flre last week. The South t'arloind Senate will be favorable to the State dispensary in its present form. The insurrectionists are reported in plain sight ot tlic city f Havana, en camped in large numbers. A massacre occurred at Sidelce, Russia, and it is reported that sev eral hundred were killed or wounded. Tlte French prelates are said to have agreed to oive the separation law a trial and to have formed a plan of action. Faiher V,'t:rn,i. iite new Jesuit gen eral, and a number of French gym nasts were received by the Pope. Important maneouvers' by tvo Ger man armies are being watched by the Kaiser. A special from Yicksbtir, Miss , says: P. S. Adams, now manager of the Quin Sharpe Itrng company, but formerly assistant cashier of the Citizens' National Bank was arrested by Marshal Wilson and taken to .Jackson on the charge of being short in liis cash to the amount of $4S.000 while employed in the Citizens' Nat ional Bank. At San J-'i au-iro the sii-ike of 1lie carmen of the Tinted Railroads, which lias been completely tied up since August 2iU is practically end ed, the carmen volinyr to return to work and submit the question of waucs and hours to arbitration. Tampa. Fla.. Special The first car load of Florida manges of this seas oil was shipped from Palmetto Thurs day. This is three days earlier thaii ever before in the history of the in dustry. The shipment consisted of ii i! boxes. The Standard Oil Company has. il is said, taken steps to acquire the principal distilling- plants of (he count ry. J. Kay nor Shuts Wells, appretice seamon. I'niicd State Navy, and son of a inil'ioiiaire. is io be discharged for the g i)(! of the service at the ex piration of his term of imprisonment at Portsmouth. Y.'i: ..At Washington, Pa., Eilmer lieinp s!er. ilte negro charged with mur dering' Mrs. Samuel IVarce and her three children in Cecil township on July 2'1, was convicted of murder in tlic lirst decree and sentenced to be han-cii, At Yi.rk. Pa., while leaning out from a box car io observe a broken wheel on a "car ahead, (erjre Maii'j a i-ei-iht conductor in the employ of lite Northern Central railroad, struck a fence along the track and v a ; iustanllv killed. At Ottawa. ().. Mrs. Henry Kin ri pen of ( lovf-vd'tle, cut off the heads of her two children with a butcher knife. She had beep in an insane asylum, but was considered cured. The children were aged three and one and one-half years, respectively. The Moroccan Government having expressed its readiness that Paul (). Siensdand. the defaulting Chicago bank president, he taken back to the United States, he will pit'oatjly be re turned in a mercantile vessel, At V;;siiiii"t;)it the director of the mint opened bids for silver, nil of which were declined on account of ihi. price being too hhili. The lowest of fer made was 67 M-4 cents per lim ounce. At Kut land, Vt., complete ret urns from State election show that Fletch er 1. Proctor, of Proctor. Republican, was elected Governor by lo,(i7(i over I'ercival V Clement, of Rutland, In dependent and Democratic. At Madison.- Wis.. John Madis ui. Republican, was elected to Congress in the Second District for the unex pired term of Ht-iifv C. Adams, de ceased. State Department officials declare there will be no intervention by the United Slates in Cuba unless the con ditions in the island shall be more loperafe thnn at present. The continuance of the rebellion in Cuba is causing grave apprehension. -V freight wreck op. the Baltimore and Ohio railroad near Sir John's run. west of Maninsburg'. resulted iu the death of i wo men and the proba ble fatal injury of another. The Department of Agicuhure is itirki:;' preparations for a thorough r.fi'ccri'.-m of ihe Pure-Food act, w.':i-ii goes into effect .Jamiarv 1. ue.vt. Congressman Kiehnrd BarthoJdt of Missouri, arrived at New Yo-. from Europe on the steamer Kaiser Wil liam der Grosse. The government of Brazil has ap propriated $300,000 towards the fund for ihe relief of the Chilean earth quake sufferers. Otic person was killed and 10 or more injured by the collapse of a bridge at Komioko. Vs.. a crowded trolley car dropped into the river. 'i hive arrests were made iii connec tion with the investigation of the Heal Estate Trust Company's affairs in Philadelphia. ( Jen. W. S. Mcf 'i.skey. commanding the Southwestern division, reports th-t ihe abolition of the canteen sys tem has affected injuriously the dis cipline of the army. The Georgian church after a long -,ti tingle has won a partial victory over orthodoxy in Rustua. fix-Judge M. If. Dent was nominat ed for Congress by the Democrats of the Second West Virginia district. William J. Pryan arrived in Lin coin, Neb., and ioi a regular Itome foik " reception. The North German Lloyd has been persuaded to run a vessel lo Charles ton and Savannah experimentally. Secretary Bool went to Valparaiso ;'!!:! donated $1,000 for the earth -ii::;ke victims. Chamois Okins. Chamois skins are considered in dispensable to the toilet, but they are au injury rather than a benefit if not kept perfectly clean. They stand washipg like a pocket handkerchief if treated t'J lukewarm water and pure soap. Face powder rubbed into a clean chamois skin will keep the skin free from the disagreeable, shiny ap pearance that characterizes ihe face of a neglectful woman. It car, be used as often as you please without pes Wjitry to the. fifst S5ib Y PROVERBS AND PHRASES. All estretiies are vicious, and come from man. All compensation is just, and comes from God. La Bruyere. We carry our neighbor's failings in sight; we 'throw opr own over our Bhoulder Frcm the French. A 'good face needs no band, and & bad one deserves' none, and pretty wench 110 land. From the Spanish. If the eyes do not admire, the heart will not desire. From the It alian, When two fall out, the third wins. F cm the German. When the mouse has had enough the meal is bitter. From the Dutch. "They say" is often proved a great liar. From the Italian. From saying to doing is a long way From the Italian. A great man must be happy is a state of slavery as well as in a state of freedom. Plato. The prick of a pin is enough to make an empire insipid for a time. From the 1 rench. ' The Age of Lead. We are wont td speak of this era as the "age cf Iron" and there is no gainsaying that, industrial!;' speak ing, iron is a "precious metal." Nevertheless, few people realize how useful, if not absolutely neces sary, to modern civiliZiition i that other metal, lead. Soft, yielding pliable, it is not much like its sister metal, but those distinguishing quali ties are what give it such a prominent place in the arts and industries. Modern plumbing, requiring many turnings and tw:stint,s. suit withal tight joints, would be almost impos sible without lead pipe. The great est Civilizing agent In the worid the printing art is absolutely dependent on lead. Hand-set typs linotype "slugs," monotype type ail are made of compositions of which lead is the chief component to say noth ing of the bearings iu the presses as well as all other kinds of machinery in which "babbitt" metal is used. Solder U another load product what a fild of usefulness ihat one form opens up. Then there Is the most important use of all to which lead is put paint, that necessary material which keps our houses looking pretty inside and out and preserves them from decay. How many of us thank mctalii le-.d fcr the comforts of raii.t? Yet the best Louse paint i.-i nothing but tue talic lead corroded by acid to U white powder known as "white lead." Of course, there ate many imitations of "white leat','" some of which are soi l as white lead and some which are offered by the name of ready-prepared aint under the familiar pre tense that they are "just as good"' as white le: 1. Put all good pair.t is made of t1,e metal, ead, corroded and ground td a fine white powder and mixed with linseed oil. White lead is also used in the coat ing of fine oil cloths and for many purposes besides paint "Red iead" is another product of metalic lead and is what is known as an cxid-j of lead, being produced by i"urnin- the metal. Red lead is the best psmt knjwr. to preserve hen, steel or tin, and is ns-id largely i:i irlnting nstal structures, such as skyscraper skeletons. mills and bridges. There are many othe- products of the metal lead, ..uch as litharge, oranga mineral, etc., which are es sential ' , many of the arts iu which we never imagine that lead v.ou.d bo of the least us?. Verily, we live in ar. age of !cs-.d f9 well as -1' iron. HANDICAPPED. "Lived with five families last week?" ejaculated Mrs. Housekeep. That isn't a very good record." "It win the best I could do, mum," responded the applicant. "I wuz sick two days." Minneapolis Tribune. TYXEll'S DYSPEPSIA REMEDY. A Guaranteed Cure Many Have Dyspcpshi and Don't Know It. If you suffer from Dyspepsia or In j digestion in any form, such as gas. belching, bitter taste, offensive rpells, sour som bad breath, dizzy ach, heart flutter, nausea, gastritis, loathing of food, paiu3 or swelling in the stomach, back or side, deep-seated kld- mMJ cy or liver trou ble, then they will disappear in a short time after taking Tyner's Dys pepsia Remedy, made especially to cure Dyspepsia, Indigestion and all Stomach Troubles, even of the worst cas?s. Tyner's Pysnepsia Remedy expels the gas9 and swot-tens the breath. It cures Hic'c Headache, Colic aud Constipation at once. Druggists or by express r.o cents a bottl?. Money refunded it it fails to cure. Medical advice and circular free by writing to Tyner Remedy Co., Augusia. Ga LUGS. "I see the 'Society News' is taking only millionaires' sons tn their board." "S:rt of putting on heirs, aren't they?" Princeton Tiger. SICK FOP. TEX YEARS. Constant Backache, Dropsy, and Se vere Bladder Trouble. Fred W. Harris, of Chestnut St., Jefferson, Ohio, says: "For over ten years I suffered from kidney disease. The third year my feet, and hands would swell and remain puffed up for days at a time. I teemed to have a constant back ache. Finally I got so bad ihat I was laid up in bed with several doctors in attendance. t Timrnt surely I would die. I changed mectieine ant. began using Poan's Kidney Pills when I was still in bed. The renei I found was so great ihat I kept cn untr I had taken abotiii ten boxes. The kidney sscretions became natural and after years of misery f was cured. I have Increased in weight aud show no symuicms cf my former trouble. ' Sold by all dealers. 50 cents a box. FcstsT -MUburn .Co., ff?.lc, N. Y. General Vonliarliarsky, acting mili tary .governor-general of W arsaw. was assassinated. PUTNAM ffc rail s0 ni-piMf Reflections of a Eatchelor. A girl gets much more offended if yon call hugging aqueezing. A man couldn't make much money collecting the rewards of virtue. The devil was awful smart to pick out a business where he couldn't fail. A collego education costs enough to support a boy if he didn't have it. A man can exercise some control over children if they are somebody else's. No matter how much a wodow once knew, she :s willing lo learn it all ov er again. Shrinkage Disposition. ( Hicks This shirt's too small for me now. It's funny how wool shrinks. Wicks Oh, it's not so, strange. You told me it was lamb's! wool, and voti know what n timi.l i creature a lamb is Philadelphia Led- i ger. Homecomers. Knieker Express wagons full of trunks show that people are coming home. Bocker So do the ones that ' are left behind New York Sun. I STOP, AND CONSIDER THE ALL-IMPORTANT FACT That in addressing Mrs. Pinkham you are confiding your private ilia to a woman --ft woman whose experience with wo men's diseases covers twenty-flxe years. The present Mrs. Pinkham is the daug-tifer'-iii-lavy of Lydisi B. Pinkham, and for many years tinder her direction, and since her deeeast,hT Avico has been freely given to sick women. Many women suffer in silence and Cf from bad to worse, knovrmg' Mil well tna-l tney Otig-ht to have, immediate assistance, but a. natural modesty impels tlu-m to shrink from exposing them selves to tho questions and probable examinatior of even their family physician. It is nnnecessaiv Without money or price jovS pan consult a woman whose knowledge from actual experience ia great. Mrs. Pinkhnm's Standing Invitation: Women suffering from any form of female weak ness arc invited to promptly eomtmvnisate with Mrs. Piukham at Lynn, Mass. All letters are received, opened, rend and answered by women only. A woman can freely talk of her private illness to 1 ts-oman; thus has been established tho eternal confidence bet ween Mrs.Pinkham and the women jf America which has never been broken. Out of the rast volume of experience which sho has to draV from, it is more than possible that she has gained the very knowledge that will help your case. She asks noth- intr in return exceot vuttr eood-will, and her advice has relieved thousands. Surely i : ; any woman, rica or poo,, js .a. luuua.. " tntrt. arlrnrrtna-P. of this Cen- erous offer of assistance. Lydia E. Pink ham Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass. Following: we publish two let ters from si woman wlio accep ted tins invitation. Note the fesultt First letter. D-onrMrs. Pinkham: " For eight years 1 have suffered something terrible evcrv month. Tho pains ate excru ciating and I can hardly 9tand them. My doctor says I have a severe fejuale trouble, and I must go through an operation if I wnnt to pi t wtdl. I i5 lir.t want to iiubn-.it. to it if I can possibly help it.. Please tell ma what to do. I hp voa can relieve me."' Mrs. Mary Phnmick. "With and K Capitol Streets, Washington, P. C. Second letter. Doar Mrs. Piukham: " After follovviiis .-aivfi.iiv vour advice, aim iah.ine '- - '?"". ' ri:V i- . ; Ham Lynn. Mass.. for special advice value and what you have done for mo. . it is fres.- and aiwt-ys help; ul. The New York Board of Education has adopted a resolution to investi gate simplified spelling wiih a view tr its use In schools. AWFUrPSORlASIS 35 YEARS. Terrible Senly Humor In Patches All Over Roily Slt.n Cracked and liieedlns: Ciirerl by CuHcm'H. "I was a.'tik-led with psoriasis for thirty five years, it was in patches ail over iny body. I used three cal.c-3 of Cuticuri Soap, sis boxes ci Ointment and two bot tles of Resolvent. In thirty days 1 was completely cured, and I think permanent ly, as it was about five years ago. The psoriasis first made its appearance ia red spots, generally forming a circle, leaving in liie centre a Enot attout the size of a silver (lo'.Ir,r cf sound fiesh. in a short tiais the affected circle would form heavy dry scale cf white silvery sppenr ance, aad would gradually drop otf. To remove the entire scales by bathing or iisicg oil to soften ihens the flesh would be peifcct'y raw, and a light discharge of bloody substance would ooze out. That ec-aiy crust would form again in twenty four hours. It was worse on my arms and limbs, although it was in spots all over my body, also on my Ecalp. Jf 1 let ttie scales remain too long without removing by bath or otherwise, the skin would crack and bleed. I suffered intense itch ing, worse at nights after getting warm iu bed, or jlcod warm by exercise, when it would be almost unbearable. W. il. Ck-desier, Hutchinson, Kan.,Apri. 20, 1903." Men who brag are those who for merly squandered. i Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Children allays pain. cures wind colic. J5c a bottle After all. a woman's effort to beau-' lily herself is but a vain attempt. 1 Dr. H. K, Kline, Ld..'Xn Arch St.. Phila., Pa. Heaven is going to be a hot place for some cold-blooded people. Jra rn fi It acU imir.pdintplv ffS 4 ion fwl its cfw-ctB in 1 IB. fa ininiitcs. Yon don' INDIGESTION and lVl f'lfSSTU jrnek tn ltm.w fts eooi. Itrlirci fUebl 3 I HKAUACUES ALSO by removing the can&c. lu cznia. . So. 37,-'06. MARE EVERY DAf saw na matter how' , bad the weather WMffi-ty You cannot ,M fittftefSi afford tn he aiford to be witnout a TOWER'S WAI"ERPROOr OILED SUIT OR SLICKER "Whenycubir IooK for the SIGN OF THE FISH & &f "ut Jr. Its Meaning To Hfci. He climbed down from the pay car with the months' wages still m his hand. "Sure, ye muss be feel in ' rich, Pat, with ail ye have there, said a bystander. And wbat does this signify to me? answered "at "Just two looks wan whin get it, antl wan whin I give it to the old wo man." Life. Fo.'low the dictates of your con science, and it's doughnut to fudg"3 you will never land iu jai'. To the Point. "Poor man!" exclaimed the goou hearted old lady, 'to what do you at tribute your craving for drink ? Is it hereditary?" "No. ma'am," replied Weary Willie: "it's thirst." Phil adelphia Ledger. On the beach at Norwich, England, the children enjoy one of the finest sports possible tobogganing down a steep sand hill. The sand bluff is 130 feet high, of soft sand, and tna coasters slide down bv hundreds. iff - filon? ' I " As yon know, I wrot" you that, my doctor said I must bevc an operation or I conld nots live. 1 then wrote ou. telling yon my ail ment. I followed "your advice and am en tirely well. I can walk miles without aw ache" or a pain. ? oss my life to you ami to Lydia K. Finkli-.ma ccetaldc Compound. I wish every suif-ring wejnan would rea'i this testimonial and rea'li.ro hi- value of writ ing to yon and voe.r renicdj'.7- Mrs. Aiary Diminick, .M-'th aiid E. Capitol Strejs, w ask. ingtou, D. C. When a medicine lias been successful' in restoring to health so many women whose testimony is bo unquestionable, you cannot well say, without trying it. 1 do not believe it wi'il help me." If you are ill, don't hesitate to get e. bot- I tie of Lvdia E. Pifcklm:u'.s Vegetable i Compound at. once. md write Mrs Pink- a w s w 53.5Q&S3.0 Shoes BEST it THE WORLD W.l.Dousrias $4 Gilt Eccs line csnnotbe equalled slanj prica . w .... s r v-e To Shoe lierjyz : W. I,. Douglas' Jo! binc House i I be iiioei, complete :n this count.rv SE0S3 f OS EVEKiBSSY AX All Hfii'B ehMa, $5 to 61.60. S&rsi. f t to $1.23. Women's Sho:. 4.00 to Sl.SO. siiBsos' cc ObUdrsa snots. $2.23 to j i.oc. Try W. IL, Itnughw WtnnrnV, BIli?s anj Cltililren's shs; for Ktylc, fit and -near they, excel other im;ks?. If I could take you into tay Iarfe factories at Brockton, Mass., and show you how carefully V. L. DougSas s?;oes are raatls, yoa would ttien t:nueri.t2n'J y?hy they hold their shape, fit better, wear longer, and are oi' greater vaiue than any other ;ake. Wherever you live, y-.: cm tMain 'V. I.. Douglas shoes. liis nattic ar.3 prsci stanptd on tne bottosn, which rrot-rs y-u ?.?-i:.iiit hi?.ti prices end interior ehbes. Tak r..o substi' iuta. Ask your rfcn!-r for V. L. Uoiigias f r.-ta end insist upon having them. O Fa'it Coor Eyelets us-J : i'lti wiit t;r,t wiw brorztf. VrUe tor liiustratej Catjiio!;;f Fatl Stvies. W. L. DOUtiLAS, Dept. 15, lirockter.Mas. You Cannot ?il inflamed, ulcerated and catarrhal con ditions of die mucous membrane such as nasal catarrh, uterine catarrh caused by feminine iiis, sore throat, soro rnauth or inflamed c'3'es by simply dosing the stomach. But you surely can cure these stubbo; r affections by local treatment with Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic which destroys the disease ge.rms.che.cks discharges, stops pain, and heals the inflammation and soreness. Paxtine represents the most susccssfrl local treatment for feminine ills ever produced. Thousands of women testify to this fact. 50 cents at druggists. Send for Free Trial Box THE E. PAXTON CO.. Boston, Mass. 13 Gives Relief. Remove alt &-treUisg la 8 ic, ra 5ays ; ejects a permanent c;ire injoto Co days. Trial treat jnvj:t given free. Kottiinrcau be fairer Write Dr. H. II. Groan's Ssns, Sp6C.a!ist3, Cox B At!3nti. Ca. WANTED who nerved in AIdresiol O) persons or rrf Jitditin blood who are not JiT inrf Witt uqv triba. 2) ni men in the l edern1 armv. r.r Ci) the fiec-eased. NATHAN BiCKFOi:i, WashiUKtou, 1-C CASH For "Your liome. Farm. Timber Jwtftsor Hiislnc. If Tu want quit ii iiiviifv, list your property wiih mr Co-op r iion fto thi irk. I havtf desirable Horosa.1 i imber Ia-ic ror a!?. Addreu SKA WELL Ktal KniHie lilsco- N O. w a&a WOflAN ! v"7 J2t fW Ii if- , 'i A i (VS. Wh iBBrria-affB
The Randolph Bulletin (Asheboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 13, 1906, edition 1
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