, £ Editor and Publisher. VOLUME XLVIII. Dedication of Epworth Church Sunday Morning win! Service at Local Whodist Church ' Con jected Before Large Con oiegation by Bishop Denny iKHO*’ PREACHED FOKCEFCL SERMON lunh Was Organized in ]jj:> With Only Handful ol Members and is Now yne of Largest in City. .. . \|,. t ciainli. located at ~f K t” mol I ifjiot ) v .It-iii..t the morning il oYlock. The ser l>v a wigregati<>n that * • • •,( itifli. tin* congre , ..min.t-rvi.i 11 \ io the officers of .- v.h" wre instructed anil iti'l";. Jh-ni/y. r . i: : i‘hiij<-li was organized in \ .small frame Church was first . a:;d this served for a number of . : ml Lays Chapel. In ,j r na . : i,. wa> changed to Epworth .., ,;<«.♦*.-,.ii i.;' lir. -I. R. Scroggs, ~, , t:> tin- (.res'll ing elder of the Sal iterv district,at that time. T| f ninuregatinii of the Church in si'ssl r.v ally Vial in 1007 the rongre ,• i, id.i i a new home and iw-.r,'perry it lit" intersection of* Kerr j i,. streets was purchased, and it» hnildiug nf a modern brick Church „.| r v ■ ii ltd the Sunday School of ■j, Chur.-h bad grown to such propor . .ai ; i r.“ m was monied in thisw li-i.i. s.i a Sunday school depart tU U- eiv. :.-d ai a cost of SIO,OOO. [•. ,i.-( and all others ou the Church l:, t>.• j.iii.i off now. and with the ■s ; • .i: ..f the debt, the Church was [i.rmaiiy dolieated yesterday. Rev. M. i m .e is the present pastor of the :limL ami ,\fr. ( . ii. IVarrier is clyair ir,:,s ~f 'he llcj.rd of Stewards. The lift* Pan!, with his training. ri|er. v*s ami work fittingly used as tetra ei.s nf whar one can do now. v.;;- tb subject of the Impressive' and fmef': -ermt.a h> Bishop I fenny. He as h> ,«.n U the 29th Chapter of fbe nf Lie Apustles. which gives ill flail'l’, i'sliisToiy ..f his eonvertion, and f ; r f - >xt t.e.k the 14th verse of the 6im diai.ier "f Unmans: "I am a debtor bill in tie* Creeks, and to the barbar ian. bulb 1.1 the wise and to the un- At die • :iie Paul made the utterance text. Bishop Denny said, he w- without an .asset. In present day Mifl'-f. If was a bankrupt. All lie a:. bad received for others, and he “s In i ijelitoi. The greatest -debt oue ' -ra 's I- i:,,t for 'pfpething received trffi '"liiniiie. but for something receiv 'd ' r Hus,nr. That is the greatest th* text. tii,. Bishop stated. Paul !"i- what he had received for • he weiii about to repay this 'b giving of bis (raining, time, and , hir.the benefit of others. - Paul began to preach the world [ 'hi'luiess ami peril." Bishop Den- j Y "Paul knw flic way to light safety, anil it was his duty to! *’ '.Knowledge to the. world. For-! r' "" : " r 'in was unknown generally. ; ; : Ku "' v 'hat 'in' were forgiven' and it ; 'w - v ''’ ti* give out this knowledge, i y ilisenvi'i'i'd chastity. Purity ' j U t> "" n 'h“ days of the apes- ■ . . '* I’aul had knowledge of purity j „pY ?:tVP 'his knowledge to ofliers. ' '! the advantage of this know- j ;s 111 'wery case the advantage ." "h responsibility to I f l ' v is always the ciise. With 1 ,I: ’’ l " , ‘ have there is an; ip li--l|i others. What we ! 'he way ~f civilization. ! money and influence, I dm responsibility to the t.,- . ,' a ' ’ 1 ffi'a'd man. an educated i ntliieiicfd by great teachers. ! declared. "And lie believed ! -- i-Tta racter was the great-! I win '•• I||( "' Wlien he started j '*• f'uigbt the Christians. And : id' conviction he j" 1 '- opposing Christian U '" :i> ' iiristian men. Paul - He thought. All like a p . Most of us are We rejteat. Few ‘‘finioms most people have "'itiis j ~*v v, I 'h convictions be k"i! it , W'-d Paul’s spculy ac of ~1, l: *’ m1 P r '*acli as an p i f'ppjp |. a "■** should do when giv *a' '!"• gri-i* 1 • "I's commission 8l “* he ai-twi* '" l,v 1 “ ai1 ever received, x" sitii*. \\ i ‘ > Wo should do '*"111,1 n' " have work to do we ar abilitv" “'"‘d and to the best of /‘?°P I>c„ v , " ' : !ll(t , ’ ; l"'int<*il out that r ’'ate "; i —"riK.‘d when our 1“" i;i,t ! " ' , * l applause. ‘ -' ai reception in heat'd (.f .. ~ l s ‘ ""version. I have i 1 ' : '" d ' out to help J. ri « if, | j lat .' vas not rebuffed. , ! ‘ a 'uaiigor f,. *' 1 ?. ,1u * "orld and only dt-athbwj ' i* ' "hidace and a i-rass "ed . hiuntscus .Paul was \\ , hind ih," t*> get rif cham pagne, 55 bottles of gin. 18 bottles of rum. and 9 bottles of whiskey. The stock was under French govern ment seal. Customs men shortly before noon be gan moving the seized liquor stores from the Berengaria. The party was led by Deputy Customs Surveyor Coltmau. They planned next to visit the Paris to seize liquors declared in excess .of her medicinal requirements. London, June 25 (By the Associated Press’). —Stanley Baldwin, the prime minister, stated in the House of Com mons today that there was no ground for protest if British customs seals were broken within the United States’ terri torial waters by officials of the TJ. S. customs service. His statement was in answer to a question whether Great Britain recog nized America’s right to break the seals on liquorsaboard ships. Mr. Baldwin said it was the practice for the British customs authorities to fix their seals as a matter of routine on ship stores taken from England in bond to prevent consumption of the stores in ter ritorial waters. The seals must not be broken in British territorial waters, oth erwise they are in no way inviolable. Foreign customs seals, lie added, were habitually broken when the necessity . arose in British territorial waiters. Conforms With American View. Washington. June 25. —The statement by Premier Baldwin to the British House of Commons that the breaking of the British customs seals on British liners arriving in New York .with stores of liquor especially sealed. afforded no ground for protest to the United States government, conforms to the view taken by American officials from the outset. It has been emphasized in Washington that the seals had no value so far as Ameri can territorial waters were concerned and that their breaking by customs offi cers would not result in any international incident. In whatever steps the British govern ment might see fit to take with respect to the action of the New York customs officials it has been pointed out here that the question involved would lx* the seizure of the liquor, and not the break ing of British seals and there has been no indication of a% intention ou the part of the British, nor as yet ou the part of any other power, to protest against the seizures. “Peeping Tom” At Salisbury Tried By Chief of Police. Salisbury, June 23.—A young white man caught up in a tree near a resi dence last night by Chief of Police Galli more was tried in county court this moraing under the new “Peeping Tom” law and was fined $lO and required to stay at home every night after work hours for a year. Columbia Gives Up Franchise. Columbia, 8. C., June 25. —Th" Colum bia franchise in the South Atlantic As sociation today was turned over to the league. President '"-’alsh, of the Ass ►ciation,. announced that he had taken over the franchise, and that he hoped to l e abb* to place it in the hands of Columbia men, "had thus keep the team in this city. Rev. J. Frank Armstrong returned last night from Keruersville, X. C.. where yeßterday at 11 o’clock he closed a revival campaign for Rev. E. O. Cole, the pastor. Mr. Armstrong reports a fine meeting and a most enjoyable trip. The Methodists in Keruersville, he says, are building one of the largest ami most modern churches he has seen in a town of its size. Rev. H. G. Allen was Mr. Armstrong's singer and gave excellent satisfaction as he did last year in a re vival campaign at Forest* Hill Church. We may not fill pulpits, but each of ua lives some sort of a sermon every day. NO. 101.