Newspapers / The Daily Southerner (Tarboro, … / Nov. 14, 1921, edition 1 / Page 3
Part of The Daily Southerner (Tarboro, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
MONfuY, NOV. 14, 1021. raoicitgm THE SOUTHERNER PAGE THKRff I AD Records Broken The Clark Warehouse We Sell It Higher OVER FIVE THOUSAND AT MACK MEETING SUNDAY Below Are Two Sales Made on Our Floor on Nov. 9. Bring Us Your Next Load and Judge for Yourself. SALE MADE FOR G. B. CAUSWAY: 8 pounds at $1.73 .; $13.84 12 pounds at $1.20 $14.40 44 pounds at $1.10.?. $48.40 42 pounds at $1.00 $42.00 136 pounds at 32 pounds at 102 pounds at 32 pounds at 204 pounds at 612 pounds 95c $129.20 85c $27.20 79c $80.58 73c $23.36 70c $142.80 $521.78 AVERAGE $85.26 SALE MADE FOR L. R. CAUSWAY: 32 pounds at $1.00 $32.00 50 pounds at 90c $45.00 176 pounds at 69c . $121.44 152 pounds at 68c $103.3S 50 pounds at 67c. . -- $33.5C 114 pounds at 66c $75.24 574 pounds $410.54 AVERAGE $71.52 IF YOU VANT TO BE SATISFIED BRING YOUR NEXT LOAD TO THE Clark Warehouse (Continued from Page One) r. Hornet in his domes, mis niscom- , tituiv and distress was so perceptible I that it was heartrending. Up to-that time Cousin Sammie would pout for a week if he didn't raise all the j hymrs, and of course he persistently j ! insisted that' wouid be the order with- j oat deviation.' His old voice was a cross between a cane mill, a noose cackling, a fiddle playing and a jack ' ats braying. I J "As a result of my labors I split j that little church just as wide open ( as a -.-mg book, corralel a lot of un- j church people and really got them ! converted." Another Leading Mind in a Church. Alack hero dramatized for his audi ence t'ousin Samuel and his visit to the presiding elder. Next he recalled a "sister" in another church who "al ways went to church to be enter tained." "She was very wealthy," said he, "and called the board of stewards to gether and notified them that it was always a please to give of her means to support my predecessor, Dr. Dry . dust, and a!-., the Rev. Dr. Soft j I edal, but that she didn't see her way icar to spport her present pastor. J They lepiied that thsy saw things j in the same light that she did but j that I was on their hands and -.vould j he until the next conference, when I't'r? bishop probably would be nierei- f: '. and relieve them of a very em b'rra.sing situation. ''Fit' six months, only two naem- I i- : .- of that church spoke to me," he continued; "One Sunday morning while i.'ie bjrds.wi.-r singing and the iv.sa was vowing and the (1 iwers blcom::ig and all nature was smiling, I -as preaehirg a great Christ that ' cot-' l save men from sin; a Christ thr.t was a panacea- for every ail ment. wave of emotion broke over th;:t church and I can see that dear Eviry lack of Occo-nea-chsa 3 ' Flour carries thlt Indian Head X ft Hot cakes that are hot cakes! DONE tc golden brown, light as a feather, every one tender and delicious, that's the kind of hot'eakes Occo-nee-chee Flour makes. And it's orly a matter of minutes to prepare the batter. Any one who can handle a cake turner can make such hot cakes with Occo-nee-chee Flour. There's no salt, baking powder, or soda to measure out. They're mixed with the flour, in exactly the right proportions and cost less this way. You simply add milk or water and shorten ing to Occo-nee-chee Flour to get a batter that makes the most wonderful hot 'cakes, waffles and biscuit, that ever did honor to a cook's reputation. Your grocer carries Occo-nee-chee Flour. You'll know it by the Indian Head on the sack. Order it today. For good plain flour Peerless is unexcelled AUSTIN-HEATON COMPANY Durham, North Carolina . ... T", It Hi,.. . m ARE YOU EXERTING YOURSELF TO THE UTMOST TO i jpj MAKE YOUR FARMING, YOUR BUSINESS, YOUR PRO- a DUCTIVITIES 100 PER CENT EFFICIENT? Do you need money, advice, or help to enlarge your activities in these lines? This Bank stands ready to encourage to the utmost all legiti mate production. m The First National Bank TO THE TAX PAYERS OF NO. 10 TOWNSHIP NEE-CHEE Self -Rising Flour Takes ths Guess out of Baking and Saves you Money i4 TARBORO'S MILLION' DOLLAR BANK old For the convenience of the tax payers of No. 10 Township, we have taken the tax books for that township and you may pay your tax to us. THE PLANTERS BANK PINETOPS, N. C. r now sitting back there on the rear roost, with her old hard, leathery, countenance turned on nip, She slculy arose and down the ais'e she came. She was so h:i;;e she al most had to move in sections. She fell 'ike a sack of sand at the altar i and the information thai she gave 1 the !.o-,l would fill a book. She t il.l 1 Him 'hat a'l her life she had been poking on the church as the cn:l in- jtead of the means to-an end and that ard she hac) substituted works for the iberality iev birth j and that :-hc again. had never heei born iJ 11 . Orris meal- The tiew sugar coafsd m chewing 0 . which everybody Jm JkSjJ llkes-you will. Wv i . issfispii ay immf A delicious peppermint flavored sugar Jacket around peppermint flavored chewing cum that will aid your appetite and diges tion, polish your teeth and moisten your throat. B122 THE FLftUGR LASTS Her Prayers Get Through. ''?he stayed on her prayer bones until -ne prayed her hat off and her hair d r.vn and her rats out. The dust powder and paint and tears eut from j i.he carpel and mixed with grooves through' the combination. It wasn't j ioTig before that old .-i.-ter ploughed j X hole through the sky and got in j connection with the grand centra1, and ! God planted the ki-s of pardon on her fasv and the sunshine of Heaven broke into her soul. ! "From that dav until Father sent j the old family carriage after her and took her home she lived a ho;y .life. Just before she got olf to Heaven she asked them to write to the preacher that had been true to hei' soul and ask him to come and stand by her ( pen grave while the dirt fell with its dul'., remorseless thud. That woman was like thousands of people up and down this country. She was looking on the church as a kind of mutual congratulation society or amusement 'bureau where fo'ks are ei.tertjined. ''-.. "The hour has come vhcn we preach.M-s must not deal in glittering genet alities' but stand as a watchman the wall and describe the state ot the heart and character of the life and peri' of the soul. The great need of the twentieth ccnturv is a conse crated ministry who will, without ntodifi ation or evasion, proclaim the g-pspel.. It is not the mission of the minister of the gospel . to give to r;nn n is opinions or proclaim to men his roLior.s and views with reference to Bib:ical discussions or. supposed modern discoveries. The preacher is a messenger and it is his high com mission to proclaim the word of the 1 Lord and God has said, 'My word 1 shall rot return unto Me void; it is quick and powerful as a two-edged I sword.' We need to substitute the ' challenging tones of truth for this cowardly and mulish reserve. The iuman race has never wandered so I fur from the paths of righteousness i or fallen so deep into sin or gotten ! - ... it. M J so tar out into me wiuiernuss 01 ignorance and superstition that it has not been able to recognize a God sent man. The overwhelming need of the hour is spirit filled, blood washed, fire baptized messengers of ith divinp firo burning in their f souls to unmask these devices of the j devil and to tear down the- strong hclds of Satan, whether in high places or low. "The hour has come for p'ainnesg of speech in preaching," the evange list declared. "I don't believe in beating the air. I'll tell you we preach jrs have got to get down to business and specify sin and sinners. I ike a minister who tells me the truth and I would walk ten miles to night to have a preacher search me uU" iCii- tile judgment. "Th; ei -fourths of the preachers u not excite one emotion for g.ioi! bii'tg ne shadow of condemna tion. The foremost preacher of his da; was Paul ; what he preached was not so much idealism as practicality; m,t s.i ir.u -h trteologv, h;.niu'etir-, ex- t 'ii:: s and diadatics as a manner of ..ie. There was no small i'u.-s nb.iut his n:iv of .rea;'hitur. No wonder wiier Paul struck town that hell howicd and the devil roared. Xo wonder they would order out the jiiiiit'.'-y companies and have riot ails. When Paul was oh the job all htl v: - awake, lie was no perfu'ie- ' tmy ;i:tro!i or ariiuiii.tid ('".--tij.l :r.;;.T.-. standing up I'efeaditig denotni- nati'tn redoubts, spinning theoogica' theoi;es' propounding pious plati tudes, splitting hairs, whittling 1111 t'eiirr "If to a point and reeling off rose water, lavender scented rhetor ical boquots and dealing in surface c ;,!'!;'!:'! -on or preaching a milk and watei ttospei afraid that some of the ')-.'! I whithers of the congregation i v.-cjl.ln't 'ike his preaching and he I would lose his job or else be trans ifeived at the next eonferenee.' The ! '.u; ' with much of our preaching , day is that.it is too nire, too pretty 1 ; art . ' ; ) dainty it does not kill." ' I-', i'jwing are the prayer meeting hostesses for Tuesday morning at 0 i " o'clock : . I .Mrs. F. J. Warren, Mrs. T. F. i White, Mrs. J. J. Lewis, Mrs. A'fred Mrs. Wooten, Mrs. Walter Simmons, Mrs. Dow Pender, Mrs. Claud Wilson, Mrs. C. W. Austin, Mrs. Dave Taylor, Rev. B. B. Slaughter, Mrs. S. S. Xash, Mrs. Raeford Liles, Mrs". Robert Long, Mrs. William Strickland, Mrs. S. B. Ship, Mrs. C. B. Ive.rch, Mrs. II. L. Williams, Mrs. M. A. Keech, Mrs. P. R. Kiggan, .Miss Delia Hyatt, Mrs. J. E. Morisette, Mrs. S. E. Por ter, Mrs. J. 0. Worshsy, Mrs. W. A. Hart. mi. I AT THE COLONIAL Love Colonial Phone No. 518 NORFOLK'S LEADING FASHION CENTRE A '$9 No One would ever imagine that suits like these could be bought for twenty five dollars It is, of course, 'impossible io tell you of ail the 'wonderfully attractive Suits in this big store but we must tell you of the extra value in one collection of Sport Suits. They are "muileln the popular "Woolsnun" and Tweeds in Blacks, Browns, Blues, Tans and Heather Mixtures, and are just rffeht for service and comfort. Sizes for both ladies and misses. They are tha ja'eatest value of the season for 325. Other Suits of Devc-tyn, Vclour, Suede Cloth, Twills, Duvet do Laine, Yalamas, Tricotines, etc., in all the most fashionable shades and in both ladies' and misses' sizes ranging in price from $39,50 to $150. Wormth, Style and Quality are Combined in Our Winter Coats Smartness of style is accentuated in these Coats of Yalamas, Duvetyn, Velour, Suede Cloth, Duvet de Lane, etc. Likewise they arc also, 'warm arid comfortable. Seme are plain, some are trimmed with rich furs. They are Coats that any woman or miss would be proud to own. The prices are from $:!5 to. $175. READY FOR CHRISTMAS IN SANTA CLAUS' WORKSHOP On the sixth floar there is a toy department that will look like a paradise to the kiddies. It is rilled with toys of every description. At the present time you can select from dozens of different things that will appeal to the little? folks r most everything from dolls to aeroplanes and you'll find the prices unusually reasonable. We suggest that you shop early by mail if that will help you. GET ACQUAINTED WITH OUR MAIL ORDER DEPARTMENT Smith & Well on's Mail Order ' Department in out of the ordinary. Ey addressing Miss Lillian Wood row you can set personal service. Furthermore you pay the same prices that are asked in Norfolk city, even getting the advantage of si ' cial veil uctions when they are in elfect. -Ei-ery purchase is guaran teed if it isn't, all right, then send it pack. You can shop by mail just as well as you could in person. 300-302-304-3C6 Grambv Street Norfolk Virginia
The Daily Southerner (Tarboro, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 14, 1921, edition 1
3
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75