Newspapers / The Eagle (Cherryville, N.C.) / Jan. 7, 1915, edition 1 / Page 1
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CHERRYVILLE, N. C, THURSDAY. JANUARY 7, 1915 VOL 14 to As the time is near here that our Legislature , will meet at State Capital in regular session, , we wish to remind them that Uhev will have a very important session before they get, through i .... i -l e with it. They will be asKea ior "legislation that heretofore was neverthought of. The one first in mindJ? a general inspection law. Throughout the State there are institutions of some prominenceNe operations in part are a ded secret to out siders. We wishVn explanation, we wish to know fV what pur pose those private departments called nunneries, consents, etc. are used at a class f high schools of a certain class V sect. We are willing to grant hem freely all the privileges ween iov but no mote. There is noV and has.been from time immem orial if history be true a sectar ian organization that nearly if not always kept up disturbances even in families, neighborhoods, states and nations, and strange as it appears our great daily papers give it a favorable com ment occasionally. Such places should never be considered a a church by civilized nations but a Pandemonium because such is the case. Roman Catholicism is the base of all our European war that amounts to brother murder ing brother. If the Pope with all his subordinates were driven would ter- A Forewarning Legislators Accidently Shot by his Friend. Lester Sipe aged about 19 years, son of Mr. C. C. Sipe of this place was accidently shot in the left knee on Wednesday of last week by Conley Robinson, aged about 16 years and son of Rev. C. M. Robinson of this place. Doctors were called im mediately and after examination it was decided to take him to the Lincolnton hospital where it was found necessary to amputate his leg. Owing to the close range the shot had shattered the bone six or seven inches above the knee which rendered it necessary to amputate the leg about eight inches above the knee. Mr. Sipe was standing on the door step at his home while Conley was standing on the ground in front trying to extract a loaded shell when in some way the shell exploded causing the serious result. Mr. Sipe is getting along very well. A I'arodox. The Charlotte Observer, Jan. 3. The Observer's readers may not have noticed the difference, but the earth yesterday was at the nearest point to the sun that it ever attains. And next Julv. when the open season for electric fans is well advanced and mountain peaks, offer wel come relief from torridity. We shall be three million miles farther away from the source of heat than we were yesterday. That, as Mr. Prewnjak. All Cities Must MakejThe Farmers and the Statements. Many Governing Bodies Over look Highly Important Ke- quiremonts and Are Liable. That statements showing the receipts and disbursements of public moneys by municipal cor porations shall be published monthly, quarterly or annually according to population showing the source fram which received and the account on which ex pended, is the law of the State as in Gregory's supplement to Pell's re visal chapter 73 "Towns" public laws of 1911, chapter 123 and futhermore that such state ments shall be published in some- newspaper of said city and county. One section, which has been so frequently overlooked by governing bodies of small towns, and which is in full force and effect to day, is herewith re produced: "The Boards of commissioners of all incorporated towns having a population of less than 3,000; boards of graded school trustees and other governing and admin istrative bodies of public school districts created by special act of the General Assembly; county boards of education; boards of road commissioners and fence commissioners charged with the supervision, maintenance, and repair of public roads and fences the, governing bodies of all otkgp , Holding Plan Fort Worth, Tex. Dec. -Peter Radford, National Lecturer of the Farmers' Union, and agri cultural expert, has given out anjnterview on the hundred and thirty-five million dollar cotton holding plan, in which he pre sents the farmer's viewpoint of thrT subject. Mr. Radford wants to know what has become of the money and invites the co-operation of the business interests of the nation in warehousing and financing the cotton crops of the future. "The value of the 1914 crop is sxcents less per pound or 14)00,000 less than the' value of last year's crop" said Mr. Radford. "This is a greater financial blow to the South than the freeing of the slaves. "The Farmers' Union asked Congress to meet the emergency by lending money on cotton so as to enable poor farmers to hold I their crop, but the request was ! rejected, or rather modified by ! the pwprn trent agreeing to join 'with banktrs in providing a fund -)f $135. 000,000 for lending on co ton. The anti-trust law had a special construction placed upon i. the patriotism of bank ers w&i appealed to and headlines full oihope were flashed across tfws-iM4'imns of the leading of the nation for hut where is the 0 Is Christianity th True Rel By Kv. B. D. Wessinr We have already considered Prophecy to some extent, and have seen how the future has been foretold from time to time, and that this could only be possible by the "revelation to man of a higher knowledge than iii.Tuwii. in una mime ici us; notice the accuracy and fulness with which the Prophets for told the future. We take up life of Christ as seen in Testament. Down througl long period of four th years the Prophets kept the people of the Savio, was to come. This S the hope and joy of of God under the 01 They could believe cause He was cons before them in th Prophets. We through the which comme: of Christ. of interest of our Lo: Old Tea came "Seais them lite a testify New TesTS been written? Old Testament! spoke wl 1 f Over Eight Engaged London. dence of I The fields oi told m 28,00 "ne 1 f f f I in r
The Eagle (Cherryville, N.C.)
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Jan. 7, 1915, edition 1
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