Newspapers / The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.) / March 21, 1930, edition 1 / Page 2
Part of The News-Journal (Raeford, 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
PROraSSIONAL CARDS. SUNDAY SCHCKDl lesson-J AndiU InTcstigatioiapt G .G. LUNDIN Certified Public Accountant Laurinburg Phones: 19 and 249 SMITH and McQUEEN Attornejs-at-Liw Practice in all courta. Phona 268 RAEFORD,-N;, Tax ! JESUS TEACHING AND HEALING Consultant Bv EDGAR HALL This is the only instance in which Jesu3f during? mdnistry, stepped outsSle of Palestine into the pajifan world. He again sought rest and seclusion for Hinu'clf and the twelve Iby retiring to thi.: northern extrem ty of Palestine. Across wTthf tiheir near % lew of snow-cappet. | ^ low, also, for oriental way$ of speech. The aayii^ is not as mfeivil the look in Hist eyes. We mu^ al as it looks,, also the'-saying was utteredj such a way as indi cated it was'_ not. offensive ‘‘but h playful and kindlw allusion. A* any ANTIO^aTNEWS. Mr Knox Watson" of State College, Raleigh, Spent the weekend with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. K. Watson. Mrs. Flora Conoly, has been quite offended by sick at the home of her^daughter. it tat caught it up with, marvelous Mrs J. A, -Hodgin. We are g^ad to C)UlCkneSS of wisdom artd wit snd IrnAxir fKaf^ altA KAf+iv now/ turned it back upon Jesus ^PglPAY. MARCH *1/ 1930. (M»d suffered a s^re injury which/200 BUSHELS CAROLINA Fn «« 200 ;Biia)ielsr^884.^^^^,. C^ *1,00 hushrf.—p. E glish, Dundarrach ^ rate, the woman may ^use ihimi. to loose the sight of/.this; eye., .He. has suffeWed fli- tensdy since the accident. Mr. and Mrs.'Ruifii8 Meat*,am and Mr. James Lyon , all of Wadesboro’ cams - over Sunday to visit tiheir wi' , . , Sho ac cepted her lowly station,' hex* allien estate, and she turro the proverb u'.'on the speaker. ,tw:SpS..kr..”L“f “i! m Misses Mazel piggs and Mary Mc Neill of Lumbertoh ciame home Sat urday aftembon oh a short yisifr.^They tO' Lumberton Saturd,ay FLUES THAT FIT uncle, JMr. P. JMcN Gibson. Mrs. l w„ mafe- . > Meacham"' and Mr. Lyon' have ipgny! nf *^n.^“** friends here, 'ttay having attended; quality and It school at Antioch wh.. chndrcn i * OSTg To SoSf‘• J^^Wthrough the^nv ^rad« 8gl^. ,tbe .-hoone and Mrs. Ira L. Newton visited of Mrs. Newton’s J. H. Blue ENGINEERING AND SURVEYING RAEFORD, N. C. Phone M61 H. W. B. WHITLEY LAWYER i Louis Negotiated on Farm Lands. Phooc Office 2t9 Residence Phone 333 BLUEMONT BARBER SHOP L. H, Koonce, Prop. Hot and Cold Baths Skilled Barbers Clean and Sanitary vaileys of those highland reruns, ^a ^ your m^y ” Jesils' I two days’ journey t,fought them to C^flVA /\n1xy' A .A«aB«M.K.Wa TJ n etteVille Sun^y afternoon. J. W. CURRIE A^mey at Law JohnsPn-'niomas Building Raefotd, N. C. . Phone 274. R. A. MATHESON, Jr., M. D. Office First Floor BANK OF RAEFORD BUILDING Iffiee Phone ^3 lesidence Phone 261 kl ^■1 ^ PAUL DICKSON GENERAL INSURANCE FOR 16 YEARS. Office: Page Trust Co. Building Phone 243 G. B. ROWLAND Attoniey-at-Law Office Upstairs in Court House Phone 227 MONEY TO LOAN. I am in position to negotiate loans of from $500 to $20,000 for terms of from 5 to 12 1-2 years on im proved residence and business prop erty in Raeford. J. VANCE ROWE Aberdeen, N. C. days’ journ the hills at whose ;"eet lay tlie plains if Tyre. It Was not a long journey, est^ by modem transportation H'3 i^y have wanted to get away from argument. He was not ready yet to commit Himself to those stormy currents which were eventually to bear Him to the Cross. There is no intimation at all in the Gospels of His purpose in going there, or of : what He did. The pi'issago which I follows would seem to indicate that I He had not lost hope of co verting j Palestine to the Gospel of the King- I dom, but that He was not r^dy to carry His gospel to the Gentiles. He could hardly have gone on a teach ing' mission; but, aj^in, we do not Incw. Only one incident of the trip is -recorded, but it is a preciou. one that sparkles like a diamond on the gospel page. The report of His marvelous, ministry went wdth Him everywhere and there would always be the si^fering and the needy wher ever He should go. Even when eff cn His vacation, Jesus had His reli gion with Him and scattered bless ings. Some Christian people v/hen they go off on a vacation leave their but Jesus could not stu l^eUgion at home pm jesus couia rjox ^ ^ ^ whom'the King leave H;s behind because it was m- j_. . , . , . wic. xvuik DR. A. C. BETHUNE Practice limited to chronic disease and internal medicine. PAGE TRUST CO. BLDG Ph6ne 218 RAEFORD, N. C FALLON’S Gut Flowers, Potted Plants Funeral Designs > WALKER, A^ent ARTHUR D. GORE Attomy and Counsellor at Law Offfiie over Bank of Raeford Raeford, N. C, DR. H. McK. McDIARMID Dentist" OfDCe over Page Trust Co. - Office Phone 204--Residence ^5 DR. H. R. CROMARTIE Dentist Office over Bank of Raeford Phones: «ffice 201—Res. 315. in corporate with His whole peraonality and was His spirit and life. During this \isit a woman met Him with the request which voices an aspect of the suffering by which He always Himself surrounded and which He was always being called upon to re- i lieve. The Gospel calls her “a wo man of Cana,an.” The Canaanites were the old Palestiinan stock which the Jews found there when they came in from the wilderness. They belonged to the same race as thf Jews, i,ut were very' *distant rela tions. One Bible dictionary .says that this woman belonged to the Phoenician stock of Syria, w'hich would prove, if it were true, that there was still in northeafC. Syria some mixture of races dating from very ancient times. These people did not share th > Jew-ish faith; they were heathen; a.nd there was a bitter hostility between them ,and the Jews. In the eyes of a Jew he womtan, therefore, was worse, so to speak, than the Samiarritan w'oman; she was heathen and alien and, if anyone could be entirely out side of the Kingdom, surely she would have no right to it. But she was a womap and a mother; her daughter was in a desperate state, and she followed- Jesus, begging and wailing, until His dlsci^es could en dure it no longer and asked Him to send her away. The twenty-fourth verse would indicate that Jesms in His own mind thought of His mLiis- try as to the Jews only; as far as that went, Ho perhaps agreed with His disciples. But there was srill the sad and seeking woman. It was easy enough to lay down a general principle, but after all, humanity is more .than a race and a faith; hu- mionitv is need, and suffering and it was to the needy and suffering that Jesus was sent. The twenty-sixth verse seems a pretty hard saying, but we need to remember thaKword^ mean one ithirig" In cold* print and another thing when they are vibrant with the sp^ei^s voice and get half gave her npt only a crumb; He gave i v, -c iier the whole loaf- Perha^ He re-! , membered the proui critms to whom'^^ent at Bora Macdon^d , College He had offered everything and who tta weekend wth her ..parents, 'vould accept nothing at al":. The , iMrs, J. A. Hodgin. door of their hearts barred, hut' f iss-Cl^re Crenshaw in Lum- here was a heart wdde open; a faith berton shopping last Saturday morn which never criticised, but humbly,’ « ' , ~ „ accepted. He did what she asked—' The many friends of Miss Mary her daughter was made whole. She Coholy will be sorry to know that helped Jesus to help her and made it. she is very ill at her home here, impossi Ce for Him to refuse her any ! Mrs Conoly is loved by all who further. This marvelous woman wa.5 (know her and her illness is the r. wonder to Jesus Himself and drew causa of much .anxiety. iWe^ sincere from Him an exci'amatjon of aslon- ly hope that she will soon be' much ishment and delight. “Oh. wioman, better, ^eat is thy faith!” These words] Mr. James McPhaul who is at- mve come thundering down througn tending school at State College, the ages and are as immortial as any-1 Raleigh, came home last Thursday thing Jesus ever said. Of all Je- for the spring holidays. He retum- sus miracles this for • the Gentile; ed to Ralaigh Monday, woman w^ Martin LutheFs favor-, Miss Ollie Biggs spent a few day.^ ite, andwhen he, too, would prevail' j.eoently in the home of her parents, wuh God, Luther would read this Mr. and Mrs. G, C. Biggs firm,',,}, J!V i, ® v^.dow , Mrs M H McPhaul.' Mrs - J. D. unfailing McLeod and Miss Tlielma McPhaul ^ luutored to Raleigh last Friday. They ther race nor station; it know-s only there. . human need. Wherever need is, Miss McLeod wall regret .i Friends o 'Know that she. has been sick for several dom is intended; wherever faith is. un^gle to return there the frontiers of the Kingdom bi3r mother. We hope run. Our opportunities are rich and ®uon be entirely well and full compared with hers, and earnest, U'ble to take up her work ngmn. persistent faith in us will bring us | Messrs Bennie and Lacy Dalton who showers of blessings. Jesu.s ^me'are attending school at .^Chapel Hill back home and found in Galilee what have besn spending several day? with He had left on the seacoast—suf- i their parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. J. fering and. need. De'^^on. We live in a w-orld of organized Mrs. P. McN. Gibson went over to ctarity—of dootore, nurses and hos- Fayetteville Saturday afternoon, pitals. There is sickness enough, and I Mr. Duncan McLauchlin a student scme_ of it incuraHe, but there is of Maxton .Tun'or College spent the gempe. sympathetic ministry to carp weekend with Ws mother, Mrs. Flora for 1... The sick are often overlooked McLauchlin. m their ^verty, but when they are | Misses Thelma ^ McPhaul, Ollie discovered, something is always done ..md ,Tsri- McNeill went over I or them. This, am^g other things, I.urrhorton S'vtiird'’v evening'. Thev « itse f the won^rful iruit of the cariied Misses Ka?:el Biggs and Mary Chnstian spirit.- The ancient world McNeill. was different. Medicine was almost Ri:z,,neth Stutts of* the local X ^ civil'zat.cn- of the time school faculty spent last Saturdrv o nst were help.ess before tiU; night in Raeford visiting her Friend, massn-e fact of human suffering; the Mrs. Dave Hodgin. lame hobbled about the streets, the jvfv. D -iglas McBryde -vh is at- in \\ere beg'ging everywhere, teiidine: Maxtrm Junior Coll3ge speut ’V, «F^I e rew>'iavR recently with his parents f IP •, if s.untea, and Mr and Mrs. F, J. McBrydie. utter holTxi^cctii^c^ around in, Miss Annie Mae McLcih went over took muq+ have * i home in Laurin,’liirg last week u.-r,™ 1:1,0 ®bd for a visit to her parents. school at Anti.o(;h when children. Mr. John Browri, of Lumbertbn, j was visiting relatives arid friends i hens Sunday afternoon. ', ■ G. L. STEVENS something like that| The Gospels rei- port how He met all that mass of misery with the endless out-pouring RENEW YOUR SUBSCRIPTION NOW TO THE NEWS-JOURNAL their meaning from His accent arid KS says— *Ti’c ivclked between the handles of lots of Planters but this is the best one yet.** The Oliver No. 55 plants corn, cotton, peas, beans and other crops with th© same accuracy and ease of planters that cost considerably more. Like every Oliver product it is built to 6ive absolute satisfaction. Designers have put into this new planter evefy feature that you need and at the same time have kept it extreme ly simple. There is nothing about it to get out of order. Mr. and Mrs. Ed McLsan. Dr. Buie has been holding a den- Ti .Vitnl clinic in our school for the past naturally limited by nts o^^iS i dax^.and qu^tp a few children u 1 F^^ iore minus many molars. Tlhis,. was must h^e hundredl^ho still ^traction of teeth _ for suffered on. This minist^ of jius wag ai aTit,ViT,ati.rxT, ..c . u think they were lucky to escape with of'h.aos. Dr. Buie was formerly io- cated in Red Springs .and. he has many friends b»e who were happy to see him again. The many friends of Mrs. R. A. Smoak will be delighted to kaiow that she is getting along splendidly following an operation l^t Wednes day for appezidicitis She is at Il;d-.t:.’s SiUiiata'um in Lambert m. Mr. Clyde Stutts of Gibson came up Sunday evening to see his sister Miss Elizabeth Stutts at the teacher- age. We are' glad to know that Miss Willa McLauchlin is totter. . Shi3 has been sick for several days, . Mr. Sirioak. Mr Thomas Mcl.auch- lin, Miss Leetle and Master Albert Smoak all went over to Lumberton last Sunday to see Mrs Smoak. Friends of (Mr. M. B. McBryde sj^mpathize deeply with him in the accident -which happened to him re cently, While working at timber he wa.s hit in the eye with a limb what the spirit of Christianity'-was do for the world. The spirit of Christianity now uses science and org^zation, but it still does the 5^ Christ. The Kingdom of Gew will never be victoriously pres ent till every resource of our civili- ^^^on is pdt at the service of the suffering of the world in the name 3.nd m the spirit of Jesus Christ. iD n FA Don’t tray a planter until you have seen the Oliver No. 55> Your Oliver dealer will be glad to tell you more about it. Furnished with picker wheel for cot ton which will strow or hill drop. Edge drop plates for corn. Pressure wheel and knife coverers or drag cov- crers as desired. UNCONQUERED By William Ernest Henley Out of tre night that covers me. Black as the Pit from pole to pole, I thank whatever gods there be For my unconquerable soul. In the fell clutch of circumstance I have not winced nor cried aloud. Under the bludgeonings of chance My head is bloody but unbowed. Beyond this place of wrath and tears Looms hut the horror of the shade. And yet the menace of the years Finds, and shall find me. unafraid. It matters not how strait the gate. How charged with punishment the N scroll. I,,am the master of m.y fate. I am the captain of inv soul. slight DECREASE IN IM- MIGRATION INTO CAN-VD-4 All Gone** We have the Gole Cotton Planter, Rex * Distributor, also a Knocker Distributor at a bargain. 1 Gox Gotton Planter at Bargain. April 1 and November 30, 1929, the total nuniiber of immi- gr^ts arriving in Canada was 13d,-1 440, a decrease of 2,158 from the c-orr^ponding period of 1928.—Com-, mercial Attache Meekins, Ottavral 1 _, United States exports of musical Accessories and supplies' lp29 showed a gain of $800,731 >-• 4.4 per cent over 1928, total ex. ' _^ortn amounting to $18,931,936.-1' specialties Division, Department of Commerce. I PI' Hardware Co. HOUSE FOR RENT—FOUR ROOM house on Stewart Street with lights and water; newly painted out.—Mrs. Nell',a Mc- Neill Phone 351. Raeford, N. C. | FOR HOUSE ^ f" ‘■'bounce that I am a .andidat,. for the Democratic nomi- Representatives’ ^ubiect to tho will of the voters in, the primary June 7th. 19.30. . ' I L. McEACliKRN. 1 And then her sra'linr plea for “more, IV *ther —please?” That’s how all little tots really oii jov LESTEjR’g PURE Mini • It’s Refreshin**'. Nourishing! Two Dellveiies Each Dav. Phone 347 I AM TAKING ORDERS FOR. AND \ HAVE IN MY WAREHOUSE For Cash Only J. S. Johnson » ' WHEN YOU CRAVE GOOD THINGS TO EAT Goto McNeill Grocery Coi THE SANITARY FOOD MARKET PAY CASH « PAY LESS TRADE AT HOME! Virginia Greening Apples ___/ 29c doz, 69c peck Maxwell House Coffee, lb ____ 39t Try Red Seal Coffee, with spoon 39c Try our Special 1 lb pkg. Coffee 29c Special 5 lb. pure Ground Coffee for Saturday only $1.00 Nut Oleomargarine .guaranteed to be as good as Nuco 25c Delmoilte Sweet Prunes, 2 lb sealed pkgs 39c Delmonte White Asparagus, large cans 33a Delmonte Tiny Green l5ma Beans _ _ 29c Cod Liver Oil — 89c ' . Fat Backs -^12^28' Compound Lai’d—12i/2f 24-lb Flour—95c Com Flakes — 2 for 15c Cream of Wheat — 25c Cat Meal—^lOc Grits—10c Farina—10c Fresh Fish jqc Fresh Autom Fat Pick Mackeref-^IOcT 3 ~for~I___ 26c SEE US FOR YOUR GARDEN ^SEEDS, CABBAGE ' . PLANTS, ONION SETS, Nice Tender Native Meats every day in the Week. McNeill Grocery Company THE SANITARY FOOD MARKET Phone 244 Next to Postoffice'-I Phone287 WE’LL SEND AN EXPERT tO YOUR AID, ANY time you have tire difficulties. Jot down the above phone number and keep it handy for just such an emer gency. Service is open'to you 18 hours a day. ■ .1 Extra supply of “spares” on hand to fit any car. Prompt response to your call. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED. LOW CHARGES. UNITED STATES TIRES ^TEXACO PRODUCTS Washing — Greasing Done the Right Way • I The Cabin H. A. GREENE:
The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 21, 1930, edition 1
2
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75