Newspapers / Tri-City Daily Gazette (Leaksville, … / Nov. 12, 1923, edition 1 / Page 2
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_i The I.eok<iville Gasette abided in 1380 TE PRINTING CO.. Orpprated, Pabiiihers E. MURRAY. EDITOR ASSOCIATED PRESS ER _ asvSecoml Class Mail Mat* •t Pcstoffice, Leaksville, N. C. _VUilv delivered by carrier y««r |5.00; 6 months, ?2.60; 3 ,tbs $1.26; 1 month 45c. 10 cent* week. Foreign Representative—Thomas F. Clerk Co., 141-145 West 36th St, New York City. ADVERTISING! RATES—-30c. per tnoii, includes composition on dis play advertising, 25c per inch «n type high plates. Classified, per line single insertion 10c; three in lertions 8c per line; six insertions /c per line each insertion; obituary notices, 6c per line. The Tri-City Daily Gazette's Im. mediate Territory includes Leak^ viile, Spray, Draper and ail Le,.,.s *Jle Townsliip, equal W a city population of 17.000. r f s. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, KANSAS REPRES .N r.Yl . > UN HOI i 1)23 E i BAH ■"TSPPPPWIPIPW.II. - When the next <-oi..,iu Representative t-. c . ■•>. sa3 propo-es to nn...< -• 1 learn just how natch m ii.y Chicago wheat speculator? * ' " propaganda the cia.n: '...u ed too much wii- - 'U vt fore sell it for less chan ■- .t : discontinue sowing it Mr. Little declares; surplus, tfe never d-d There never was sucii a u surplus bushel of wnc.a. the world dispose fore the next come; v ordinary and ncct • •• • for flour and older quireinents. ihi: - i the biggest and emeu : ' perpetrated in thi ;,roi:mi .v. our farmers mill.on.- ■ • > made no money fo any. u, the speculator- We u -cd up. last year, exactly a; niticn we raised this year, and wo! u. again if we do not c i a There has never been an ! when a careful examinant h. vhci a;**' ra facts wouldn’t hav without ar.y question 1 of this surplus h;Y people have -been ■ their wheat and discs'. . It, because mSn who their wheat fur no;:: to circulate that .deft, supply and demand fan; in the United t harvest, every r -it-! <--r wheat would hate Id at ow home at S!.£d a bushel and be worth that rrueh rt rht uw. were trie lit ton in good COPPER -\XJ> BRASS Next year’s cunsciiTi r qy oi anj insect soreeti hf h in th s o try estimated at ood.; ; ;:,p feet, in a report made by the Copyor and Ur:, r ■ Association, disclosing lire re of a conntry-v: ir ;ri ” mr ■ which it has just completed. Wit hthis. year’s er.-p of .pests scarcely out of th • wa Pf ' ARRISON SAID (■ HAVE SHOT 7 OF ins ten Children issociated Press) ■a, Tenn., November 12 ison, farmer, shot and ti huj ten children af ar Dayton, Sunday af »rdItM to .. ndviba re are already made for next ye -crusade against the fiv a-id mn-: ■ .to, and the figures made public i the Association’s stirv.y are tb. f fore based on the aciy | ttons of the demand for d. or ; jtprindow screening, >>r , n.f to use the name which lr. en selected to dulinquish thi of screening from the larg hed screening used in paper ma! g, coal sifting and the like. survey disclosed among otli that more than 100,000,0" feet of insect screen cloth i annually to replace screen *h become useless thru rust. I' shows that, based upon con ilon figures for the past year had br-nxe tereen cloth wl* ■if| t«b per cent <4 - pth consumption, e* &3,ti!h), ; MUM feet, Consuming a fc«t £,960,000 pounds of copf.g cloth, which- makes up 43 square feet of the total, cor. per cent copper, of the present tendency a wider use of more pernta aterials in all phrases of construction, it is likely consumption of bronze and screen cloth will be some increased, the copper and £ industries placing as their ;or potential market a total 1,000 square feet annually 0jjp; 39,000.000 pounds of cop ■ 1 ■ '. .-=*= |Rev. J. M. Everett Speaks on Spiritual Misrepresentation “I am come that they might have life, nnd they might have it more abundantly.” Misrepresentation has had * very large place ;u the history of man :.;nd; its hold upon the business world has been of no less importance than iis hold upon the religious world. To defraud . people through misrepresentation - and relieve them | of hard earned money, is a'felony punishable by a fine or imprisonment . r bolh; and the culprit must suffer a punishment equivalent to ihe enor mity of the crime. But what redress has one whose ■ mind and soul have been defrauded religious misrepresentation 7 11 the value of the mind and soul war on a par v. ith material fluctuations,, ‘ in ail probability wo v.-puld be oblig ed to modify our viewpoint. l>ut_ the relative importance oi the spiritual ne so far transcends the relative importance of the wafer.ul liie, that -ne latter is cptUpieieiy negatived «/>.'. the tot met . ihroagimut the his fcoiy of Jess, c.a liny career, Uteres. ..., record or i, eat e.er discoursing , upo.t liie subject O’- Biology though He new ds mystery and source. lie i a.o. however,, leave no doubt as to .rip source of spiritual life. Uis , u.,v.ded;.e of previous events gave ...in a ciae to the imposition which m.cl be.ii practiced by unscrupulous , i-ce.iery preucdiers and teachers,, ., on a.i i-.l-.04i.ly !. i-y.i.Jen people.. !t!icW,'o> no one else could possi ii:, the foul liielinnis empioyea y thorn to i'i pagate a false, doc ,lne under .ho ..s.-umption of trutn. ,ie e’.ai-'tiies them as thieves, “ihe ...,et coatetit nit, but for to steal, ...; rih, .iid to destroybut 1 .in.o that vt n :...11 have l.ie and \ t* nua.a .iuvo ti iiiiio .found,, it- * ills an:---Ogy reveals a eie.tr ! , a lenient of ii:s own position aim I .:.iitu.de. The ' selfish motives wh cl< . opted trio false prophets to gor ..ai.se upon an du: ■ . . . public, ro ! i a polluted heart and mind. Said I ..an to me one day, "What do 1 i . o about the other fellow, as long j : pel in it-111” Vv hat ilia they care j out Hod or humanity so long as ., ,■ s ,: were inet; How dilferc-nt 1 . 0 a,:iiidle of Cftri-If! “i came not to ,. own will, but the will of . i that sent rue'.” first of all :-'iy was placed upon Him. In, ..i-.::.,s d: 1-5 Paul gives a cogent m for God sending. Iiis only be j .(ten son to sin-cursed world, r v. hat the law could not do ini it vas Weak thru the flesh, God . fug His only t on in ihe likeness . inful flesh and for sin. condemn on in the fltfsh that the righteous r of the law might be fulfilled in . who .walk not after the flesh . after the r.inru. The inadfKiltnky of the law had it' ; (i .pro -.ini, in individual irre : ijy-^a \ <r:iklie--:-, tli.it hit'! source: a misunderstanding oi V, elective. purpose. Israel was eh by; God for a special work, : t was nec€>?ary that -a choice shs uld .. .. and God knew, better than ■ v else* the various races from ...It He could select one best siiit ■ s carry out His divine will. • 11 His purpose have been any orent bed . He selected any other e of people'.' God was righteous ' nil His acts were righteous act .el' es- God’s chosen people were putt into righteous relationship h Jchbvah as a result of this ire. Hence, Inael was righteous :-u»e God was righteous and all acts were I’iabtealia acts. This i evol. a lift*.f; teg pvin via i was one with Israel- and Israel one .with God. The great union formed must have expression :<rh some modm.ting principle ’ hence the priestly office was in ituted. The work of the priest was ‘fined to the ordinances of sacri s. There \*sre burnt offerings, sin-. Tarings ani tha ik-offerings anci any others. But there was one of ring which was made onee a year • the high priest in the Holy of ©lies for the sins of all the people 1 which special significance was st udied, ar.d that was the blood oi 'e paschal iamb. The writer of the ptsiie of Hebrew makes clear the •4et» prctahilng to sacrifices, Heb. T .1. “Now if there was perfection :ru the Levite* priesthood (for un er it hath the people received the vw) what further need was there hat another priest should arise af sr the order of Melchizedok and ‘ot be reckoned after the order of \aron ? Again in Romans 9: 11 the writer ays, “But Christ having come a Iffh priest of the goad things to opto, through the greater and more arfect tabernacle, not made with rinds, that is to say, out of thi=: rcation, nor yet through tha blood f gon's arid calves, but through his v»a blood, entered in once for all To the holy place, having obtained .icrnal redemption.” it ij evident •rt>m these facts that undsr the old system individual responsibility for wrong-doing was lacking. ,The indiv idual unit was lest in the great unit Israel; and God was one with Israel ar,d Israel was one with God. This exception had a tendency to shift individual responsibility and rest it upon God’s elective choice—. the reed of Abi-iiham. Soushio does libertine whether or not it applies to religion or civil life. This we ob serve that as time went on the shift ing of individuaf responsibility and resting it upon a nationifl. conception of a divine choise, resulted in a moral, spiritual and national de cline that soon ate deep into the vi tals of the national life till complete religious chaos had set in and na tional prestige had lost itself in the vortex of Roman rule. In the midst of this hopelessness Jesus came not to annul the law but to fulfill it. A new light-the arc light ot God’s love was to displace the candh light of a covenant, that light \va‘ He who wa sto illuminate the world and change the whole relig'ou; thought. Second, The object of Ilis eoniin Christ himself give sthe clue as t< the object of his coming. “I came t< seek and to save that which wa lost.” I came not to call the right* ous but sinners to repentance. 1 am come as a light into the world. He that believeth on me shall not abide in darkness. He that hath the son hath life. T am the resurrection a d the life. , r>m the way, the truth, and the life. I am the 1 lead which came down from Heaven. Your fath er did oat manna in the wilderness and died: but ho that eateth of this bread shall never died." These Quo tations express sufficient reasons for his coming into this old world, to impart a new life. The great Apos --- ■■ -' tie said, “I am erudfied with Chmt; nevertheless I live; ■ yet not I, he. Christ liveth in me; and the 1.1 which I now live In the flesh I Dv. by the faith of the son of God. w.. loved me and pave himself for me. do not frustrate the prate of God for if righteousness come by th law, then Christ is dead in vain. Gai atinns 2: 26-21. The life thua expres ed by Christ and Paul was one un he same. It was a transformed 1.. made possible by the love of Got. hru the atoning sacrifice of HI on Jesus Christ. A perfect lov< must have a perfect sacrifice; an v 'perfect regeneration must em body a complete surrender to the will of Christ. The power of the new regenerate life has worked itself oui hrough the hearts and minds of men ind women everywhere for nenrh :,000 years, The new life is describ •d by raid as the “putting away of be old man and putting on the new nan” permitting the old man to die >ut being alive unto Christ in tht ew man. The life which has its be inning Imre in the lives of men nd wom'en is an eternal life. Tht ■ Je of Christ precede.death. There is no warrant anywhere in scripture for a purgatorial preparation. Jesu? gave a perfect illustration of that fact in the story of Dives and oi I.azarus. Christ died thi sside of the grave and not on the other sire It would be a reflection on the ade quacy of His atoping death were it otherwise The Bible plainly teaches that the soul after the death of the body returns to God who gave it— that is, it is under His control. Death snds the resisting will of man and brings him impotent before God. You can "fit the most food value out of wheat by eating bakings that are made from good plain hour. A depend able baking powder must be employed or you do not get the full nutritious value of the wheat—nor v ill your bakings be as pal atable and easily digested. The same results cannot be had if you use Self Rising Flours, or any so called • ready-to-use substitute for plain flour and good baking powder. Food authorities and physicians agree that bak ings that do not raise properly are bad for the health. Such foods are hard to digest and in time cause stomach trouble. Mothers who are interested in the proper growth and health of their children (and all mothers are) should never use anything but a good brand of plain flour and a time-tested leavener such as Calumet—the economy Baking Powder. Calumet has more than the ordi nary leavening strength. It raises every baking to its -height of nutri tious value. It is pure and depend able— do not look for a substitute— there is none. Use Calumet and-be positive of whole some nutritious and economical foods. PACKED IN TIN -KEEPS STRENGTH IN 1 EAGLE “MIKADO”'* I ^Pencil No. 174 For Sola U jruur Dealer Made in finj trade* ASK FOR THE YELLOW PENCIL WITH THE EAGLE MIKADO EAGLE PENCIL COMPANY, I Shoe Poll It. improves your per sonal j <0 W A 15 a.' m. Meeting Train for Win ston Salem 9:53 2:20 p. m. Meeting Train for Roan oke, Va., i:00 p. m. Meeting Train for Win ston Salem, N. C. 5:00 p. m. Meeting Train for Roan oke, Va. - 7:00 p. m. Meeting Train for Win ston Salem, N. C. This transfer will stop for pas sengers at any time at the following places: Jones Motor Co., Spray Mptor Co., SoifolkS Western IMPROVED SERVICE TO THE WEST AND SOUTHWEST Sleeper Winston-Salem to Cincin ati. Dining Cars on all trains. Lt - Stoneville 1:10 P. M. Lv - Ridgeway 1:36 P. M. Lv - Martinsville 1:64 P. M. m. Meeting Trfin for Roan Va., 7:21 ^-Vl. ■ Ar - Roanoke 4:16 P. M. Lv - Roanoke 4:40 P. M. Ar • Cincinnati 7:20 A. M. No change of trains between Stoneville and Cincinnati, Ohio. Pul aan reservations and all information heerfully furnished upon applica nt to Agents of the Company, or B. Perkins, T. P. A. Winston- j uiem N. C. Junior Bldg. On The Boulevard! {EIDSV1LLE-LEAKSVILLE-SPRAY TRANSFER We Stop at the Piedmont and Bel vedere Hotels on all Schedule trips. FARE 51.00 EACH WAY LEAVING LEAKSVILLE-SPRAY We mawe connection with Greens boro Transfer each trip 7:30 A. M. Meeting No. 44 for Dan ville . 8:40 A. M. 10:30 A. M. Meeting train No. 45 for Grcensborc . 12:60 P. M 3:30 P. M. Meeting train No. 135 for Greensboro . 6:13 P. M. 5:00 P. M. meeting train No. 35 for Greensboro __....... 6:62 P. M. LEAVING REIDSVILLE FOR LEAKSVILLE-SPRAY 3:40 A. M. meeting train No. 44 for Danville.8:40 A. M. 1:62 P. M. meeting train No. 36 for Danville.1:52 P. M. 7:00 P. M. meeting train No. 46 for Danvijle .... 7:00 P; M Best Cars end careful, courteous Drivers TELEPHONE 297 SPRAY WANT ADS Wanted—Salesmen or individuals to solicit purchasers fo;- fruit farms in the Sand Hill section of the Carolinas. Experience not .neces sary. Good pay for service. Caro lina Peach Farms and Develop ment Co., 229 South Tryon Street, Charlotte, N. C. FOR SALE—One Acme dress form in perfect condition. Instructions for adjusting. Price $10. Phone 132 LOST—Grip containing several Ra zor straps bearing name of Con nard and Walters Co., Charlotte, N. C. o nroad between North Spray and Draper. Return to Wingfiell and Meyers Barber Shop and re ceive reward. WANTED—Man with ear to sell complete line high, quality tires and tubes. A money making proposi tion for either full or part time. Exclusive Territory. Sterlingworth 'Tire and Rubber Co., East Liver pool Ohio. LUST—Certificate of 'deposit. No. 3744 . for $220.00 issued Novembei 10th( 1922 by the First National Bank of Leaks villa, N. C. the pub lic is hereby warned not to trade for same as a duplicate has bean applied for. rM*. Thos. G. Jones. LmkcviEe N. C. Phone 58 WHOLESALE GROCERS ALL STAPLE LINES NOTIONS . O R»g» l«!e. President, Madison, iv M Film, Scc; Treas. Leaksville .HE TRAOfc FURNISHED DAIL1 market quotations on REQUEST DR. J. G. HICKERSON DENTIST i Office jver Spray Mer-entile Bldg * SPRAY. N. C. DR. R. J. PEARCE , OPTOMETRIST lyes Examined Glasses Fitted PHONE 442 HOURS 8 to 12; 1:20 to 5;» to BOULEVARD BANK BUILDING r# TODAY ,i k yy* TOMORROW m ■■■> HENRY WALTHALL MAE MARSH This realistic picture of history in the making is of un told value to both old and young. Besides the historictl worth of this great spectacle, the constant emotional throb of the romantic story thrills the hearts of all. It covers the essen tial details of American history ranging through three cen turies. Boys and girls, old and young, don’t let this great, pih ture get by you. It is one that everybody should see. “COMING SOON” ; *>’ “BUGGLE8 OF BED GAP" “THE MARRIAGE MAKER" “ZAZA” “WOMAN PROOF” . The Boulevard Theatre EMERSON and GAMMON INSURANCE REAL ESTATE; PHONE 55 ON THE BOULEVARD . , ‘in* I Leaksville, N. C
Tri-City Daily Gazette (Leaksville, N.C.)
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Nov. 12, 1923, edition 1
2
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