Newspapers / Lenoir News-Topic (Lenoir, N.C.) / June 15, 1906, edition 1 / Page 3
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EPISCOPAL U ETH0DI3T CHURCH, SOUTH. Eev." D. Vance Priet?, r&itor. Se rvices every Sunday at 11 a. a. auJ8:00p. in. Sunday School at 9:80 a. m. . Prayer meeting T7ednVday night at 8:00. Epworth Leagoe Sonday evening at o'clock. :V . " ' - - PRESBYTERIAN CHURDH. Rt. D. P. McGheachy, pastor. Servjee every Sunday at H a. m. aud 7:30 p. in. , ; . Sunday School at 90 a. ta. v ' Prayer meeting- Wednesday even ing at T:S0 q.'clock. , i' : BAPTIST CHURCH. Rev. Q." H. Church, pastor. - Services every Sunday at If a. m. and 7:80 p, n. - V . 8unday School at 9:30 a. m. ;Praver meeting Wednesday -sw ing 7:80 o'clock, - ? ? REFORMED CHCRCH . Rev. W. H. Me'alry, Pastor1. 8ervice Fint , 8unday ln each moth at 11 a. m. Second and Fourth - Sundays at 11 a. to. and 7.80 p. in ' Sunday School at 9.45 a. m. . ST. JAMES EPISCOPAL CHURCH. Rev. J. B. Moody, Rector. Service Second Sunday in each month at 11 a. m. and at Cbapel of '.Best at 4 p. m. On the Fourth Sun day at U a. in., Chapel of Peace 4 p. - m. and St. James 8.00 p. in. Sunday 8chool at 9.43 a. in THOUGHTS FOR i SUNDAY. aria r.c:e aaa i:.cre,e jjw; a. gooJ-Ivxiing Dotr boy and wine women. I asked the boy if the commandant had been there, and het;aid.ia Dutch, taken by sur prise, 'Yes'. 'Where ha he gone!' said, and the boy lecame su,pi- . i W Ml A. cious. tieanswereu, 'i nui no ay.' r ' ' I decided to do a thing for which I hope I may be forgiven, because my mens' Kves were in danger. I threatened the boy with death if he would not disclose the where abouts of the general ! He tjU re-' fused, and I put him against the wall, and said I would hare him shot. ' At the same time I whis pered-to ray, men, For heavens' sake don't shoot,' The boy still refused, .although I could see he believed I was going to have him shot. I ordered'the men to 'Aim. Every rifle was levelled at the boy. "Now,' I said, 'before I give the word, which way has the general gone! "I remember the look in the boys' face a look such as I have seen but once. He was trausfig ured before me. Something great er almost than anything numan shone from his eyes. , He threw back his head and said in Dutch, 'I will not say.' There was noth ing to do but to shake hands with the boy and go away." ' Goinf Shares. 1 Parish Visitor. ; A girl carrying a great bunch of gorgeous autumn leaves transferred to a downtown car from one just coming in from the suburbs. She had evidently been holidayiugthat afternoon, and was bringing back . with her into the crowded, clam orous city just a touch of the glory ; 01 xne nuis. LtiOKing at ner sweet restful face, one knew she was the kind if a girl who always carried back into other lives something of her pleasures and her privileges Said a srrav-haired mother the other day, '-I tell my daughter I am starting my college days over ? again with her." f ' It was a good deal of a struggle for that family to maintain the . daughter during the four year that a university course would mean ' but every day she was bringing THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON XU, SECOND QUARTER, lNTEfl- KATVONAL SERIES, JUNE 17. Text mt tkt Lmmk, Lak. fx. SS-M. Icmtt VmM, SO, SI Coldea Text, Lake Is, 15 1 Cily Prepj4 kr Rv. D. . Sti Outwits the Surgeon A complication of female troubles, with catarrh of the stomach and bow els, had reduced Mrs. T. S. Austin, of Leavenworth, Ind., to such a deplor able condition that her doctor advised an operation; but her husband fearing fatal results, postponed this to try Electrio Bitters; and to the amaxe ment of all who knew her, this wed cine completely cured her. Guaran teed cure for torpid liver, kidney dis ease, biliousness, Jaundice, chills andj fever, general debility, nervousness and blood poisoning. Beet tonic made. Price 50c at J. E. Shell's Drug store. Try it. and fun, and something of the thought and inspiration she found in the college halls. She could do nothing to make the financial bur den less in the home, but the sac rifice was lightened by her thought fulness in sharing the good " things of her life with others. There are some people who, un like the girl with the autumn leaves, and the young college stu dent, seem to absorb all the prlv Jleges of travel and culture, to lis ten to the best concerts, to have leisure for music aud reading; and then close down upon all they have received like a steel trap. i In so doing they not only de prive others Of pleasure; but , they lose much joy themselyes.v It is wise to remember , that nothing "good is truly our own till' we have shared it with another. I Will Not Sajt Parish Visitor. The story of a litteBoerboy Vho '.. . refused to betray his friends even .v- on the threat of deoth is told by A Major Seely, M. P., as an.illustra tlon of deeply rootedSove of free- , dom and of country. ' It happened during the Boer war. "I was aslred," said Major See )yy 'to get some volunteers and try j- TO capture a commanuanb as a piuve unmd nvanrv. mi mi hwhv t i miii he men readily, and we set out . It was a rather desperate enter prise, but we got there all right, .I can see the little nlace Vet, . the valley and Hhe farmhouse," and caiihear the clatter of the horses hoofs. The Boer general had got away, but where had he gone! It was even a question of the general catching us, and we not catching the general. W'e rode down to the Coins' to Paint V Season ? r - ilus His the palst ca your home ever ttuck five years t The Every-Day Woman. Parish Visitor. She is not a genius, this plain person who keeps the wheels of life moving. Just a well balanced friend m i 1 m . s 1 wno goes on neruauy rounus. uen luses are oiten eccentric anu can do great things, but some of them don't like to peel potatoes nor put on a patch. We never feel afraid of the every-day woman, for she does not criticise our English nor ask us the reason why we do things thus and so." As a rule, this plaiu woman does not aim to le brilliant or great. She is no smaller or richer than we are aud is a real obliging friend. She is like ourselves, and enjoys the common joys of life, and 'weeps with those who weep." She is full of sympathy, and we don't hesitate to tell her our troubles. My lady is not always "consumed with cares," and is willing to cook a good dinner for the chance guest without grumbling. I jiu afraid that the plain, com moy f rae people iu our life are not half appreciated. We could uev er do, without thm. The lauti- ful Woman is admired, the woman of Intellect is respected; singers, in ventors. philanthropists, are praised, but what of the playi toil er in the calico gown! 'Abraham Lincoln voiced our sen timents when he said: "The Lord must havejiked the common rpeo nle well, or he would not. have a made so many of them." CopTTifM, IMS, kr Aacricu Froa AjKoatka. In each of the three gospels which record the lesson of today the. tr&na flfuratioa story, is Immediately pre ceded by oar Lord's eaylaz concern- tnf some standing there woo would not taste of death till they had seen the kingdom of God (verse 7T). We can not but believe therefore that the trausflsuratloa and lta accompani ments -.were the fulfillment of our Lord's saying. Peter's comment" upon it in II Pet L 16-18. and his frequent references to the sufferings aud the glory (I Pet 1, 11; lv. 13; v, 1) confirm this. In last week's leeeon we beard our Lord ioreteu Ilia suffenogs ana beard Peter rebuke Hint for the thought Tben our Lord said that His followers must be prepared to suffer with Him. to deny self, take up the cross daily and follow Hliu. But for their encouragement He said that though He was now with them In hu miliation.' He would coiue again lu glory and reward every man according to his works (Matt xvl. 27). The trans figuration was a sample of His glory. His kingdom In miniature, to encour age those who were following Him lu His humiliation to be content and even rejoice, to be partakers of His suffer ings, knowing that when His glory should be revealed they would be glad with exceeding Joy (I Pet lv. 13). Abraham was sustained by the assur ance of the city. Moms by the recom pense of the reward, Paul by the glory to be revealed and our Lord Himself by the Joy set before Him (Ueb. xi. 10. 16, 26; xlt, 2: Rom. vUi. 18). The Lord Jesus was in constant and conscious touch with His Father In heaven. Knowing that He came from God aud would return to God, He gave Himself op wholly to the will of God and ever lived to please HI Father, trusting Hun for every word and work. In Him dwelt all the fullness of God. but as a rule the glory was concealed Within that mortal body. On this oc casion as He talked with His Father the glory shone through, and His face shone as the sun, and His raiment was white as snow, white and glistening. Compare He v. I, 13-16; xlx. 12. After Moses hud been forty days with God In the mount bis face shone, but that was reflected light This light seen in Christ was from within, for He was God manifest in the flesh. In all. the Bible story only two men besides oar Lord are recorded as hav ing fasted forty days, and here they are with Christ alive and well and talk ing with Him concerning His ap proaching sufferings as the great sin bearer, by virtue of which tbey had already enjoyed hundreds of years, as we count time, in the presence of God, one of tbem over 1,400 years and the other nearly 000. The death and res urrection of Christ must have an lm porta nee in the eyes of the redeemed In i Eimu Paiht will stick five Bec&uso The essential raaS m . I ficaUon of a w ' lasting paint, vix-. pigments aod pure United- oiL art what yon ret when Uahmab Pacit Is used. . 7o do mot hum the quality, of od isei In ready nixed paint Too do Bot know how Ions; the ready mixed paint has been standing. Hammar Condensed Paint is aothlag but a perfect blend of paint pigment. Ten add tkereto an equal portion of pure linseed oiL The result Is a paint that you know eeutalas pure Unseed oil without adulteration. A paint that always has lasted five years and always wuL But to make ft safe for yon to buy Hammar paint, we will guarantee it to last five years or money back. This guarantee is backed by a half million in eash and by the Great Hammar Faint House of St Louis, with the reputation of a third of a century back of it for honorable dealing. Drop in nme day and let me tell yon some thing about paint that's new. R. H. Spainhour, Lenoir, North Carolina. Don't be fooled and made to be lieve that rheumatism can be cured with local appliances. Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea is the only pos itive cure for rheumatism. 35 cents, Tea or Tablets. Dr. Kent's drug store. REACHED VIA QUEEN & CRESCENT ROUTE Clsst Tfcs & Dallas, FtWcrtli cJd E:rfcraTm$ Pefcts. FOURS, Qdcisst to to Soften Tens Prists. SOLID TRAIN TO NEW ORLEANS AM) Qnoxnah Through gloopr Shrevcport to GhAttanoogta and to. louLwlIlei Excellent Service to Northwest Points Far afagMtiaa all or Mtfress J. 6. CONK, 0. P. JL Baas Bitcx, CtattaaMfa, Tesa, K. r. LATHIS, T. P. A. " CC2 Cay ttncL KmxtUU, Ttaa. 1Th.m Tcrtii Cazolixia State Normal and Industrial College LITERARY CLASSICAL 6CIBXTIFIC PEDAGOGICAL COMMERCIAL DOMESTIC SCIENCE MANUAL TRAINING MUSIC Three Courses leading to degree. Special courses for graduates of Ipther; colleges. Well-equipped Training School for Teachers. Board, laun dry, tuition, and fees for ue of teit books, etc., $170 a year. For free tui tion ttudents, f 1 25. Fifteenth annual seseiou begins September 20, 1908. To secure board in the dormitories, all free-tuition applications should be made before July 15. Correspondence invited from those desiring compe tent teachers and stenographers. For catalog and other information, Address CHARLES D. McIVER, Pres., QRBENSBORO, Nortn Carolina. Week End Rates.-Season 1906. C. & N.W. and C. & N. Railways. To all agents: This will be your authority to sell Round Trip Tickets between all Sta tions on these lines at a rale of One First-Class Fare, plus twenty-five cents (25c) for the Round Trip. Tick ets to be sold on Saturday of each week, (rood returning on Monday following date of sale. The above rates will go into eneci on Saturday, April 7th, lSKMi, and are effective until ana including Satur day, October 28th, 1006. Use regular Local Tickets, marking across face of same, "Week End. E. F. REIU, General Passenger Agent. Approved: Li. 1. IXilUJO, General Manager. Co. D CAPITAL $20,000.00. J. C. 8EAGLE, Pres. JOS. A. PRICE, Manager. G. L. BERNHARDT, Sec. & Treas. G. F. HARPER, Vice-Pres. r i t 4 i DoUlttfs nSSt Salvo For PCe Burnts torts. The Very Best Remedy for Bowel TrouDie Mr. M. F. Borronehs. an old and well known resident of Bluffton, Ind. ays, "I regard Chamberlain's Colic Cholera and Diarrhoea Remedy as the very best remedy for bowel trow ble. I make this statement after having used the remedy in my fami ly for several years.- I am never without It." Thia remedy is almost sure to be heeded before; the summer is over. Why not buy it now and be prepared , for iuoh an emergency? Bold by J, E. Shell, Dr. Kent's Drug Store & Granite Falls1 Drug Co. A Chicago renter tried, to kill his landlord to avoid paying his rent, If this custom becomes gen eral, landlords will have livelier time dodging renters than the latter now experience in dodging land lords. ' glory which they do not seem to possess to many or ine reaeemea on earth. See Rev. v, 9. 19vil, 14; xli. 11; xlv, 4, and compare with reference to what tbev should be to the redeemed on earth, Rev, i, fi, 0; Gal. 11, 20; 111. 13; Eph. I, 6, 7; I Pet i, 18, 19; 111. IS. etc. We are surprised to see the three fa vored disciples heavy with sleep In the Dresence of such glory, but does not this and the fact that they actually slept in the presence of Hie sufferings In Gethsemane strikingly set forth our inability to grasp eternal realities er cept by the Spirit of God? Do we not all sadly confess our Indifference to the things unseen and eternal except the Spirit quicken us and teach us? And when we attempt to apeak of heavenly realities are we not apt to talk as fool Ishly as Peter did on this occasion (verse 33) unless the Spirit speak through us? For the natural man can not understand the things of God (I Cor. tt, 11-14). Moaes and Elijah ana all the prophet spake of Christ by the SDirtt (i Pot i. 11). as tt Is written, "To Him give all the prophets wltneee' (Acta x. 43). aod now from the doud is beard the voice of the Father, say Ing. tThls Is My .beloved Bon, in whom I am well pleased; hear ye.ulm. With verse 35 compare Matt xvtl. 5. TWa testimony front heaven may well cover an uia pnwc umbihu, wmw tbaf at His topttem' coVen the thirty years of His lite at Naaareth.' In all His life on earth He always pieaaea the Father. When His kingdom oomea It shall be seen that He will have with Him HIb risen and translated salnta represented here by Moaes and Elijah, and Israel on earth shall be a righteous nation, represented here by the disciples. The King of kings wKh Hia church glorified and Israel in their own land shall pos the whole earth and fill It with His glory, and His will shall be done on earth as in heaven, and the' king dom on the whole earth ebalj be the lord's. Wars shall cease, every high thine? be brought low. and the Lord atom shall be exalted in that day (Ita. uY . 11. IT). The sight of thte glory made them fall en their faces In fear, aa It afterward did John Iff Patmoa, but His loving hand and His gracious Fear not" are ever the same (Matt xvtl, 0, 7; Uev. i, 17). Tbey saw no man any more save Jesus only with themselves (Mark Ix. 8). and thus we are to go on day by day, occupied with Him and His grace and glory till wt see Him face to face. Bo shall we be tronsflgured, tor that is really the word In Bom. xti, 1; II Ooe. HI, 18, which In the A. Is rendered ,nranaformer and "art changed." If then were mors transfigured saints there would be mors wanting to be like them and UksHim. BIDS WANTED. Bids are invited for macademizing a part of the public road Southeast of town of Lenoir, in accordance with plans on file in the Registers office, Lenoir, N. C. By order of the Boaf d. J. L. Miller, Clerk. May 11th, 1906. T t I Manufacturers of Leather Goods. 4 t I f 1 Pltdmont Building. PRice BARness co. YOU CANIBUY LAUD In The New Country Recently opened tip in east ern Arkansas, Louisiana, (Mississippi Delta) and South eastern Missouri along1 the lines of the Missouri Pacific Railway and Iron Monntain Route at $7.50 to $15.00 an acre which when cleared and and slightly improved readily brings a cash rental of $4.00 to $6.00 an acre. UNIVERSAL Opportunities exist for the Homeseeker aod the Capi talist. There Is No Better . Land in the world than the rich alluvial Delta and Riyer bottom lands of Southeast Missouri, Eastern Arkansas, Louisiana and Texas. Honey in Land Beats Honey In Bank Especially land that is rapid Jy increasing in value. Write for Maps, descriptive Litera ture, etc., etc. Homeseekers Tickets sold lat. and 3rd. Tuesday Every - rionth. l e rehlanoertiv:p.m. aii;; ' 34 West Ninth Street, CHATTANOOGA, TENN. MICE STATIONERY. And if that is what YOU want, this is the place. We make it our business to please everybody. THE NEWS PRINTERY. YOU ARE INVITED. To call and see our Stock of General Mer chandise, which is now complete. We are ,v tiajhp niore business than we expected to "Td&and if you have not given us a chance to serve you call let us showyou 9ur stoek. All Goods New and Respectively.! Fresh. Munday & Gash. Subscribe to The Weekly News. DYSPEPSIA CURE DIGESTS WHAT YOU EAT Ts 1 1 .60 kattto contains 2 thaw tis l . cl 0 main owlv at tub uaouvosv e. Li B. C DsWITT As COMPANY CHICAGO. IU. For Sale by J. E. Shell, Dr. Kent and Granite FalTs Drug Company. 17 q
Lenoir News-Topic (Lenoir, N.C.)
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June 15, 1906, edition 1
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