Newspapers / Richmond Headlight (Rockingham, N.C.) / July 6, 1906, edition 1 / Page 7
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♦ jig QrmMt. flitted flour, on* —M water and a atari™ nJt**Cto» tto lard la tto door until ft U too, *— tetttoto tto water, aatac all tto •nr. Tara oat ago* a wall-floored toted, dtrtdo corally aad rott oat — i* O—t too »)• paa. potting too crate to gw oat tto air. Fill with *r«U you here, roll oat tto “ W< la toll aad cat three V tto center of tto i tto pto aad pat dowa o* tto rang* edges ■ _ . .. _ tlia odga with tto •* of a fork, toko until a ateo ton. Gather up tto arrapo aad rail Own aat again, aad cat out with a — irta of a diver aad hah* a dallcata brown. PUoe a tot of Jelly la tto center of eaeh gton aad yoa bare a plate of dainty Heavy tectigc an Letter. A Dover, Id. H. men haa a tetter •an tto Arctic era on which tto poet ago amounted to more, than |U. II wan written ocf a ▼ caret In tto Arctic wtoltag dent, aad tad to to ant by to of tto boo la rwtamtag with » TOBWMP WITH MteTtt. ■ill Uatac DOOM'S Kidney PI 11m KM Capt. & U Crute.AdJL Wn. Watte Cup, D. C. V.. Roanoke, Ti.. nays: i snnerea a lo«g. long Urn* with ay back, aad fait dreggy aad listless aad tired nil tha time. - I lost from ay | usual weight. | >16,to 170. Urin ary passages were too freqaeat aad I have had to get up often at night. I bad headachoe tta Hay spell* also, bat my worn an Boding was from renal colic. Af ter I began using Doan’s Kidney Nts I passed a gravel stone as big as a baas Since than I have never bad aa attack of grave], aad have picked «P ta my former health and weight. X am a well nsan. sad give Doan's XMney Pills credit for it-" Ml by nil dealers. SO cents a has. Fnater-XlUbara Co.. Buffalo. k. r. >_ ▼here is hardly anything that makas a woman madder than to bare tor photograph look like bar. So. 27. .to eared, in to minatee bjr \Y not ford's . town I ottee: Mrrr tail*. cold toy Dreg feJs sss^sr’.jrv* * ^ Whoa the ayes have been trrltited tkroagW excessive aea a oomprsss ot Baa llaea eat with very cold water will •morally brtag relief. Aa eyewadb ffhat la paiUcalariy excetleat when la has set la caa be made by U drops of spirits of erm Maspooafnl ot boric add aad i of a cupful ot boiling orator. . strain through muslin aad apply grery hoar with aa eyecup. Veils with thick, heavy dots are extremely bad for to aym. aad they ato aot half aa pret ffy aa to tor Preach veils with a top dot scattered here aad there. Beailteg :a the twilight or ooatla'atas w do fhaey work whoa the syne are Used should be forbidden. Crown of dfokL lata Paul Lawrence Dunbar, pest." said an editor, "ones n Sunday school la New Turk.' As add Incident happened, 'at Its and, aa Incident that laughed at as heartily aa the m ’. toward the dose sf hie re ar little friends. It you do kings earns day you will ear a gold crows. Tea. each of you earns day will wear a geld crown.* •A little chap la the frost row. t*s friendly eye. piped: to mow.' bis toot,' said THE PULPIT. IN ELOQUENT SUNDAY SERMON BY THE REV R. a CARSON. HN«Ml T*« Mwj mt MM* Brooklyn. S. T.—la Grace Presby terian Church the pastor, the Rev. Rob ert H. Cnrsoo, preached Sunday even lag from the book of Ruth. Among ether things be said: We miss a great deal of the beauty •mt power of the Bible because of the manner in which we am accus tomed to read it. There are very few who take time to read n whole hook through at a slugte sitting. We d.p Into Scripture ss If It were a book of fete, reading s verse here and another there, so it is wot surprising that we rise from the exercise haring received Iwit little help and spiritual refresh ment. There is no royal road to knowledge. There Is no way to gar ner the lessons which Holy Scripture tenches sav# through that steady and persistent searching of which oar Sav lons spoke when He said. “Search the Scriptures, for they are they which testify of lie.” It Is our hope this evening to point out some of the beautiful lessons con tained In oue tittle hook of the Bible, In one of the most delightful stories ever presented for cootemptatlon by the nilod of iuan. 1 refer to the book of noth. Its very place In the sacred caitou make* It a memorable piece ot literature. It la. ns you know, pre csded by Ike (took of Judges, aud fol lowed by the book of Samuel. These books are concerned almost exclusively with the national history of ltmel wlth the wars, defeats. bumlltaUbns. murmuring*, complainings, repining* nod repentances of the people. They are not. in the main, pleasant rending. Their pages are red with hlood. and violence, aud rapine, and lawless deeds, the unchangeable consequences of n nation forgetting God and neglecting to do His wlIL It is a creat pleasure, therefore, lo tnni from these hooks that tell or the nps and downs of national life, and fix tbe attention upon the t-Barmlng story of Ruth. That little book pic tures domestic life: It cirea ne a glimpse Into tbe <inlet. everyday habits and customs of tbe men and women 1 of that time, and we see them In tbelr home*, in the harvest field*, at tbe festival*, and at religions service*. Biography is, ( think, tbe favorite rending matter. We are deluged with a flood of fictitious ldogtapby in the shape of novels which route by tbon aands front tbe printing press every yettf. It la itn easy, bnt not very profitable kind of reading, for la the majority or cases there is a great deal of unreality, too grunt an absence of the lifelike, and too little of what we know (she* common experience. It la not so. however. In the book of noth. There we hare life traly de picted: there we meet with ineu and women a* we find them to-day—not An gela and not demons, bnt erring, endur ing. faithful and not anbleat. It la not my Intention to enter upon the story. I trnat that yon all know It. or that If yon do not. that yon will take a quiet half hour this fei-y even log. and. peruse that little book, which In Its superiority, la at far removed from oar modern stories as tbe east U from tbe west. In coming late touch, then, with this piece of sacred literature, and consid ering for oar edification some of the lessons which it teaches, we see first of all the superiority of character. The twe chief figure* In tbe story are Boas and Bath, and it Is tbelr characters that make them such. There Is not In tbe whole mage of literature a bet ter type of manly, healthy religion than la exemplified in the case of Boss. Ton remember that semis In tbe har vest field. He went tlown to hi* reap ers. and his MlolatioN without any rant or insincerity, was. “The Lord be with you." My friends, when such a greeting as that can take place be tween master and men. it testifies to lb* presence of a religion that leaves Its mark upon very set. and upon all the couduet of life. It Is tbe men like Boas who are the ornament and glory of religion: the men whose I teller* III fluence them all In Ibe manifold con cerns of life. In tbe forum. In the mar ket plare, abroad as well as at home. Our Lord tells as rrho are lo be ac counted blessed. It la not the mere bearers of His word, nor they who can cry. “Lord. land,” ami affirm that they bar* prayed In public place*. It Is “Blessed are the doers ef tbe Word." and hleased they alone, finch in his day was Bos*—a man of kindly feel ings, pore heart, strong conviction, true purpose, and the benediction of tbe Most High was udoii him. Sack, too, waa Ruth, with bar loving, lander, considerate heart—one of tbs fairest character* la tba whole range of Hebrew Scripture. And tba mast noteworthy fact In tills connection is that them character* ware peadacsd amid surroundings and an environment that would have tti canragsd the average peraaa. it waa a lawless time: restrains were weak ened or entirely removed, and men be came a law ante themselves, dock a condition of and sty la net favorable to the cultivation and development of the nobler virtue*, end yet. amid suck a •tote of things, w# have tba stlrrleg •sample of those two who bravely maintained tbe testimony and did Ike tHH , It la not at at] aoosttsl to hear •ton blame their snrronatf Inca for tlirir •non and mtatobca; it to Indeed, tbe demon way by which we seek to con done «mv fallings, bet tbe eacnae la not valid. Soma men. It la fmo. art mare atvancy tempted ibaa others; some arc to ptocea that require a strong heart, a Srm faith, as aaabaken eaaldenes In God and In tb* power of Cbrtot in erdar that tony May ba bent from the am fbdt prevail* sround them; bat no ■ns, If bln pnrpota bn tone, ran ever *» wb—p evememr. There la no •"■Ptetien that both befallen any man to* totot la tsmmmi. and at way a with tba temptation tbera Is a way af es Jto^JwtonidyweritotoS'm wa^ oar failures, bat. looking up to Ood, wo abonM ask Him to search and try w*. to see )r there It any eric had way In ns, and lead ua in tbe way everlasting. But we learn again, from tbe story, tbe pUco of good works In tbe religious life. I do not tblnk we wonld have beard of Boas nnd Ruth If their religion* life had consisted of fsltb atone. It is their deeds, the resalts, lu dally life, of their faith tbnt Is especially dwelt upon. In this respect the hook or Ruth makes an admirable commentary upon tbe epistle of James. Indeed, oue of the most cheering features of modern re ligion* life lies In tbe fact that this divinely appointed connection between faltb nnd works Is ilnlly receiving more attention. Par be it from me to lightly criticise oirr Puritan forbears, still ns w« reed about these heroic men or whom the world was not worthy, doe* it not sometime* teem as if the neces sity of raltb wss emphasised at the expense of the necessity of works to correspond? The two have been joined together: tbclr union constitutes tbe perfect religious life, aud what Ciod hath jollied together let not man pnt asunder. What I am trylug to sny has lieen summed np lu n sentence by the late f. W. Robertson, u sentence which the church should never 1st die. nod that sentence Is. "Faith alone saves, but not tbe faith that Is alone.” Ton remember Christ’s word*. "Do men gather grape* of thoru*. or tig* of thistle*?" Tbe man who rlieitora his knees with the glow of the dlvT*« com munion upon Ids face, the man whose faltb hath made him a partaker of the power of Hod. and who then goes forth to lire tbe life wblrh bis ralth hath revealed to him. is tbe man of whom Christ alone will not be ashamed when He cometh in the glory of Hi* Father and of the holy angel* to judge the world. U Ik noteworthy. too. I think. that the Tirtne in which Book nnd Rnlh ex celled waa the plain, everyday virtue of kindness. The greatest materia! blessing* are the most common; air, light, water, these are within the reach of all. So also the greatest virtues nre within the power of nil to possess. Paol says. “Now abideth faith, hope.' charity, these three, but the greatest of these Is charity." It I* possible for n# to nttnln to the possession of that ferae* i —the greatest of all. We all have di verse gifts nod powers, differing one from another, so thst some mount higher than others, but there la none of ns. no matter wbat our limitations may be. who cannot apeak the kind, word, do the kind deed and pets the kindly judgment, and that la charity, the greatest of the virtues. Wbat a change wonld- tnbe place In this old and weary world If only onr deeds cor responded with our faith and Te fol mied the royal law according to the Scriptures: "Thon the It love thy neighbor ns thyself." But. again, the book of RoUi teaches un the necessity of decision. We read that Rntb and Orpah came to the part ing of the ways, tbnt one turned back to Moab nnd her people, and that tho other took her way to the land of Israel. I* not that a true simile of life? Sooner or later each one of ns comes to the porting of the ways, nnd we make the decision whose results are endless. “The kingdom of n*yven.” Mith our Lord. “luffaretb vlnlcucOdM^ me violent take It by force.’’ Tliat mentis that one cannot drift Into It. It needs a strong exertion of the win a decision that abides. Memorable forever is Ruth's decision. When she nays to Naomi. “Entreat me not to loave thee, or to return from following after thee, for whither thou goest I will go. and where thou lodgest I will lodge, thy people shall be my people, and tby Hod my Ood.’’ she takes her place among the first ranks of those to whom the high and gracious hearts of all ages pay reverence. Friends, It Is a great thing. It Is n needrul thing In life to bo capable of a clear resolve. The roan is to he envied who con part between this nod that of opposing claims nnd considerations, sod Is able to say. “Hera I see my path; along this nnd no other will I go.” Indeed this ability to make decision la the founda tion of all true and successful life. In religion there la no escape from it. ' on mu not drift Into a state of salva tion tn a crowd. “Ones to every man and nation cornea the moment to de cide In the strife ’twixt truth and fhlse b<*>d. for the good or evil side." To each of ns Individually comes the choice wlint to do. Many a one I think. U kept from the freedom and joy of Christianity not Itecanse these things are nnd wired, not because the call of Christ la unheeded, or HU claims unacknowledged, bot simply for the want of the power of decision, of strength te go forward upon a per sonal quest. Young friends, la yon especially this lesson comes. Vos have still with yon the power of choice, and ta you from oat eternity comes the cry, "Choose ye, choose ye. this day whom ya will aerre." Pray Ood that yon make the good choice, and receive His grace te abide therein. Dainatao. Tb« common coocrptioo or tlf« la fata#. Tb# nit majority of pscpla am laboring nndor a dotation. Ton stand wbarn tba lldat of bnmaalty roll swift and strong—yon asa men aceomntattng ^aloaaal forlonaa at a bonod and iirtng ? V***^1®* apltndor; yon notlea tba •Wb^ fat and pita tart-taring apt mraant at-tbs dnbbonasa; tba coorsa. a morons Kalttaffa at tba aortal fane* Mona, tba Csopatras. tba Sahnnaa and *50?! «"•«• aM> wins flnahad rbatkt aotraaes bnt to do* •unpand ran say: This la Ilf*. Ufa at hlgb noon aad lilgti midnight of tba twsntldb eaatnry.”—R#t. a O Urson wood. _ mu >iiim roothot. — •®r» »°^*rf»I abont anr ImC I ban Bis jtsrfsct oat oral naan, HU abtonraa Xotbing' axrssalrs. notblaT^raaMad; •o^*1** aafblag aaawaaatatrl* sal: no aadardatng. ao orsrdatan. Tb# gild m as of Christ waa llka rba an*. «■*»* •»»*»«•. tba dawn, ilka tba aw#rt anBMnar rata bra id id wttb tb» rainbow-WlUtaw U »*‘“ Wbdt a glartna dft aopaglapp salat* •nap la in Nastfi Raarsn Mat nut tlally ronalat ta tba abaanw of what* adar dtotnrba tba «Mst taJaywt a« tt^^TJiaatyaaaaa-lb tba intimate SE2?1rbSL fOMtlkW WmJa mi Dtseem per mmeCtp eared bp Dr. Um> Orest Herrs lm» ■«- M trial battle aad treatise tree. Da. M. M. Kuxm.lM,. mi Junta. .Philo., Pe. I* March 1SM Japanese left tha Ha wains Islands for the fwile Comat. Mm. Wlaalcw e Boothia* iyrup for Children tsMMBfcBMN—thag«—.radeoaalnflanna. Uoa.afleye pabt.caroa triad anlte.BBe a bottle William Dtaa Howells raa toll bp pear sorest what citp yoo cam bon. Til- Dr. Bigger* Huckleberry Cent I at Tor all Bowel Trooblee. Cholic, Dysentery, Choleramorbua, Cholera lataainn, Children Teething, etc. At Druggists Mo and 60c. Lord Xorllicole, governor-general of Australia, was emtertalned at a banquet in a coal mine at Newcastle. New South Wale*. The banqueting ball was 300 fe*t below the eurface. BeW-e THIS ? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for aay ease of Catarrh that caanot be cured bp Hall's Catarrh Cure. r. 3. Cukxst A Co., Toledo. O. We, the undersigned. have knows K. J. Cheney lor tbs last 16 years, aad belters him perfectly honorable la all business trunaac 1 loss and flaaneiaUp able to carry out say obi I set Voss made bp their Ira. Vfsarr A Tsbax. wholesale Druggists, To ledo, (J. Viuue, Sums* A HilTir, Wholesale Druggists, Toledo, O. Hall's Catarra Ourels lakealataruallp.aa* tsgdtreottpopoa the Mood aad muouooasur faces of the tprtam. Testltnonlala seat free. Price, Tie. par bottle. Bold bp all Druggists. Take Bau’a Panlly Pills for ooasttpatios. State pride takes strange forma , Wisconsin notes that more rats than j ever before are being caught within 1 her borders. She attributes this fact | to the Increased production of cheese. , CHILD’S AWFUL SKIN HUMOR. ■emrneA TTltk rain — ■■■bring Nearly ■rolca rw.lt'. iMrUlymlllr Curd ky Cnttmr*. "I wiah la inform you (hat the Cntlrura Kemediee bare put a (top to twelve rears of miatry I panted with my eon. Ae eu infant 1 noticed on his body a red spot, and treated eamt with different remedies for about fire year*, bot when the apot be gan to get larger 1 put him under the uare of doctor*. Under their treatment the diecoao spread to four different parte of hie body. The longer the doctors treated him the worse it grew. During the day it would get rough end form like scales. At night it would be cracked, inflamed and badly swollen, with terrible burning and itching. When 1 think of his euffering it nearly breaks my heart. Hie scream* eoald be heard down ataira. The aoffrring of my ton mad* me fall of misery. 1 bad aa ambition to work, to eat, aor could 1 alatp. Una doctor told jne that my aon'a cexera* waa incureblt, asd gave it up for a bad job. One evening 1 saw an article ia the paper about tka wonderful Cuticur* and decided to give it a trial. 1 tell you tbe Co lien r» Ointment is worth its weight in gold, and rrhaa 1 bad used the lint bos of Ointment there waa a great improve ment, and by tbs time 1 had naed I ha second set of Cnlicura Soap, Ointment aad Resolvent my ehild waa cured. Bela now twelve year* old, end his akin ia as ha* aad smooth ai silk. Michaal 8tein .•man, 7 Samper Arenas, Brookl; n. N. 1 A*rtt ». nte” Don’t waste time finding fault with yourself; that’s .what your friends are for. HICKS' , CAPUDINE I INNUUIUT CVM1 U HEADACHES (^~«.>«COLDS I m • TO n now pMMm •- — if - “IT SA MY LIFE” WISE EH > FIMOIIS VEUCiE ■r*. WtUadaaa TaMa Maw 8b* Triad Lydia E. Plakltta'a VfMatla CoapMad Jaat laftaM. _ Mr*. T. C. Willndaen. of Manalnr, Tow*, write* to Mr*. Pin kb am: Daarlti*. Plnkham “ I can truly a*y that yon bare and my lib, and I cannot axpraaa my graEUud* to you in word*. (SMrxTCWiUadsen g\ M Baton I wrote to you, toning you bow I frit, I bad doctored for over two mn (taady and too* lota of toonay oo medk-inr. bni,Ua. but It all faUad to help mo. My monthly riod* bod erand and 1 suffered much pain with fainting .pell*. haarlarha, barkacb*and bmrlag-down palm, and I waa ro a rah [ could hardly Warp around. Aa a la* rraort I droddrd to writ* yoo and try Lydia K. Piuk ham'a Vegrtabl. Compound, and 1 am H thankful that 1 did, for after following your i nit ruction*, which yon nt m* free of *11 <'barg«, I twain regular and In perfe, t health. Had it not bean far you I would b* in my rrmv* today. “Iimoeraly trust that tkd* latter may Ind nary suffering woman in tbs louatry u> write you for brlp as I did." When women ore troubled with Ir regular or painful periods, weoknra*. displacement or ulceration of an organ, tbnt bearing-down feeling. Inflamma tion. backache, lie tales or. general de bility. Indigestion or nervous prostra tion. they should remember there it one tried and true remedy. Lydia E hick ham's Vegetable Compound at once rcnovM such troubles. No other female medicine in the world haa received such add*spread and nn qualifled endorsement. Refuse all sub stitutes Pot 25 Tears Nn. Pink ham. daughter in-law of Lydia B. Ptnkham. haa uuder her direction, and ainea her decease, been advising sick women free of charge. Address, Lynn, Mas*. MEDICAL DEPARTMENT. TULANC UNIVERSITY OF LOUISIANA 1U advantage-* for practical lottruwtli.rv Wth ih ampt* labttrmuxiaa and sbunOtm botpUal tutltriala art uncquaUatl. Frre arm* la glvan to lb* |it«t * Karily )loa|>llal with «(« l«da urvj M.000 lamamt aiuicallr- *u»evlal itwirtKikin It dvn dally ui tb« badtlJa o( fha ntcU. Tilt i»#xt treat an ba^lna October tllL ISOS. For catmloau* and inforrattlon addrrta ; .LLsrc wss&»«8 Preserved Purified and Beautified by The WorlcPs favorite Emollient for rashes, blemishes, eczemas, Itch Ings, irritations, and sca lings. For red. rough, and greasy complexions, for sore, itching, burning hands and feet, for baby rashes, itchings. and chafings. as well as for all the purposes of the toilet, bath, and nurs ery, Cuticura Soap, assisted by Cuticura Ointment, the great Skin Cure. Is priceless. Oi— tm Iiwmi •<* tato—« baiai m mmr W—■ '. ft— to ftr#tla.ftt« I—•** to A— unroll OMto*n —m* tor . 6u—to.. ft—5 •— toft Oft to— to rWrWi OftftlWk tor — rtf total aiteracr*** iton»e hiwi. ftw* Dni a Cttra (Vs. ftato Nft . ft**, to—. mm Maf to Vim • totm. ft—a i«i Haft * you Cahkot CURE all inflamed, ulcerated and calarrhalcoo ditionsof the mucous membrane ruch » nasaHsLsrrb, uterine catarrh caused by femlnlac ills, sore throat, soro mouth or inflamed eyes b> simply dosing the stomach. But you surc'v caa cure these stubborn affections by local treatment with Paxtlnc Toilet Awthcpfl? which destroys the disease gcrms^berV* discharges, stops pain, and heals -tbe inflammation. and soreness. Pa*tine represent* tbe most sucdsstu) local treatment for fern I sine Ills ever produced. The jsands of women testily to this fact, jo cents at druggists. Send for Free Trial Bo* THE *■ PAXTON CO.. - Maos, So. 27- 06. $2 to $5 POPE-TOLEDO TYPE X, $2500. j THIS 4-CYLINDER 20-24 H. P. POPE TOLEDO Contains every good feature of the world’s best practice in automobile construction. Including Chrome Nickel Steel Transmission, Gears and Shaft*, Gravity feed. Cape Cart Victoria or Canopy Top, $200 extra. This car can be driven behind a team walking or up to It* maximum of 50 mile* an hour on the high gear. / A light widdy car of great power, speed and endurance. Easy to drive; easy on tires; easy on the pocket book for upkeep. POPE-TOLEDO TYPE VII, $2500. This is our front entrance model which is now so popular. It has the regular 30 H. P. engine and chassis and is a car which appeals to the convenience and comfort of the owner. Roomy Tonneau and Pope-Toledo construction throughout. , ' WS WANT TO PLACE SOME;or; THESE CAN*: IN VOS * VICINITY, wwrre us ros parixu lams, catalogues, ere. Tm x, «iim. POPE MOTOR OAR OO. DESK 3, TOLEDO, OHIO. , Bolton, • • * - • « • 333 Columbia* Avt, W. V. City. ....... 1T33 Broodaay. Wayhlngtan, D. C., - . . . aiB 14th »♦., n. W. Mambar, Aaaoeiaiion of Lloar>a,a Automobile Manufacturer,.
Richmond Headlight (Rockingham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 6, 1906, edition 1
7
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