Newspapers / Watauga Democrat (Boone, N.C.) / May 29, 1958, edition 1 / Page 10
Part of Watauga Democrat (Boone, 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
lurch^Votices TOWr TOM MITBT CWmCT Harlan Greene, superintendent Sunday School 10:00 a. m. Preaching first and iccond Sun ayi at 11:00 a. m. Training Onion aach Sunday at :00 p. m. Wednesday night prayer meeting t 7:00 p. m. Sunday School? #:? a. m. Morning wonhlp? 11:00 a. m. nursery la kept for mall chil ran during thla lervice, with a ?na an duty. Waatmlnatar Fellowship ? 5:45 m. Circle* o f tha Women of the burch mart tha flrit Monday of wh month; general meeting each ird Monday. BLOWING SOCK ratST Baptist chvrch O. Carlton Cox. pastor. Sunday School? 10:00 a. m. Wonhlp service? 11:00 ?. m. p ^n<Uy *?Mtag service ? 7:80 I Prayer meeting Wednesday ? t:* p. m. J Choir rahearsal Wednesday J 1:00 p. m. PreSeason HEATING SALE Effective Immediately we are offering a 10% Discount on all complete HEATING SYSTEMS with the first payment coming October 1 See l)i for Estimates. PAUL W. YOUNCE BOONE, N. C. SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. Home AM 4-8860 AM 4-8869 GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH Council at 7:19 p. m. 'ii.The Woimb ot the Church will bold the June meeting la rellow ship Hall, Monday evening at 7:90. The topic. "Lutheran WeUure Wurkers In Japan," wlH be discuss ed by Km. Herbert Way. Host-, eaaaa wlU be Mrs. Paul Millar and Holy Communion fir* and third Suadaya; Church School at lOjO; Holy Communion each Wednesday at 10:19 a. m. Church open daily. , CHURCH or CHRIST Sufiday: Bible Study? 10:00 a. m. Worship 11:00 a. m. and 7:10 p. m. Thuraday: Bible stody? 7:90 p. m. BOONE METHODIST CHURCH The Her. E. tl. Lowman, paator. Sunday School In the new Edu cation Building, 9:49. Morning worship 11:00. A nursery will be provided for ?null children during the Morning Worship service. fT. MART'S OF THC HILLS EPISCOPAL CHURCH Blovinc Rock. The Rev. John 8. Mc Duffle. Sunday service, Holy Commun ion ? 9:00 a. m. Church School? 10:00 a. m. Morning Prayer? 11:19 a. m. Holy Communion and healing services each Thursday at 10 o' clock. CATHOLIC CHURCH Epiphany Church, Blowing Rock. Sunday mass 9 a. m.; Holy Days 9:90 p. m. Cemeteries To Be Cleaned Lutheran cemeteries in the Green Valley School neighborhood will be cleaned Satilrday, May 31, in the afternoon to prepare for regular mowing by machine. At *09 there will be a brief Me morial Service conducted by the Rev. E. r. Troutman and the Rev. George W. Shuford Memorial Services Meat Camp Baptist Church will hold its annual Memorial Services Sunday, June 1, at 11 a. m., with the Rev. Bernard Tuttle, pastor, conducting the services. The serv ice la open to the public, Mr. Tuttle stated. 3 Sunday services at 0 JO a. Morocco Inatalls new Rightist government. Is Give*! n . ? /? . rrrtmcatfr (From Baptist Seminary Extension Bulletin ) Rev. Victor Trivette of Contort, N. C. received the Certificate In Pastoral Training on March SI. Mr. Trivette >u an outstanding student. He begM hU work in the Seminary Extension Department on January 4, 1W7 and worked faithfully and diligently until tlu series was finished Recently Th? Biblical Recorder, the Baptist viper of North Caro lina, carried the picture of Bro ther Trivette, his church, and their new pestorium. He Is a very husy pastor but not too busy to study. He has done outstsndiag work In his pastorate. Sunday Mass At Blowing Rock Father Joseph Kerin has an nounced that beglnolag Sunday, June 1, Sunday mass will be offer ed at ? a. m. in the Epiphany Catholic Church in Blowing Rock. As of that date there will be no Sunday mass In Boone for the summer. / Clement Says World Avoids All-Out War Banner Elk. ? "Nuclear arms have reached such destructive pro portions snd are so nearly equally balanced between the leaders of the world as to have been elimi* nated as a practical recourse in cold or hot war, Gov. -Frank Sle ment of Tennessee told 103 mem bers of the graduating class of Lese-McRae College here Monday. "The world avoids all-out war fare on the rhakjr premise that op posed lesdership will remain re sponsible enough not to jeopardize the destruction of the whole world by resorting to unlimited nuclear weapons," he said. "A warfare that would be al most as destructive for the attack er as the attacked Is not a practi cal Instrument of diplomacy or of international action," Clement said. For this reason, Gov. Clement said, Russia has resorted to the "cold wsj." "In this, and. Indeed, in any warfare short of the warfare of annihilation, the productive capac ity, the industrial capacity of the opposed countries and groups be comes the basic de terminator as to who is likely to succeed," he said. NOTICE Notice if hereby given that the town of Boone dump U not available for use after June 1, 1958 except to the town of Boone, A. S. T. C. and N. C. State Highway Commission. The town officials regard this action as necessary because of the abuse of the privilege by individuals it was considered in the interest of public safety, convenience and necessity to take such action. TOWN OF BOONE Costs hundreds less than it looks Aatf 4m 't let Ihoso long, tow Thundorbird Hms fool ytv. Ford Is Ibo Am w ?I half Mm (Ino-cor pricol Here's a ear that rides, handler, and goes like the Thunderbird ... yet i? priced with the very lowest Smoother riding new front and rear suspenion soalu up even the biggest bumps. New Maflte-Cirrle steering is 12% easier than ever. And Ford's fabu lous new V-8's are packed with power and packed with economy, too. As an option, you can choose Cruise-O-Maric Drive . . , no automatic shift-so fine is priced so low. Pay more? What for? Coo* in today and drive the fine car far hundreds less than fine-car price*. NOTHING NEWER IN THE WORLD 58 FORD COME SEE HOW *00 SAVE I IITN'iiMmMkii r-mm*' ? c-? rfce <fH(b m France U on? no one can ?c curately Judge, but it could be the most significant of the poet war period. A. thU it written It ki Mill not ?ol ;?i , By the time you read this Gen eral Chart r? .de Gaulle might or might not have gained new anp port in hit "willingneaa" to take over the country. But thlt event? if U develop! <oe? not neceaaar ily mean that the United States and Great Britain have found new strength. For wfejle de Gaulle waa an al ly in wartime, and white ba it a champion of strong France, ready to use all force to retain Algeria, he la a tempestuous leader and prone to twist the Lion's tail and evep snub his nose at the United Statea. More than one observer fear* his ascent to power might mean tension between Britain and the U. 8. on the one hand and France on the other. De Gaulle threatens to play hall with Communism, if necessary, to achieve his ends, and he Is accused of "dreams" of: a France and an empire that la no longer a reality. Yet France is almost . a void in the free world today, torn by nu merous parties and too many fac tions and extreme emotionalism This lack of stability has brought the aouqiry close to national dis aster. There are those who say that if ever France needed a strong man, this is the time of greatest need. Yet It Is difficult for citizens of successful democracies to admit that democracy has failed in France. Rather, it may well be "that it is the people of France who have failed. And even if that ,be true, this is poor consolation to those who had hoped that the post-War era would unite a strong France with other major western powers. The crisis in France today de monstrates that this wss a forlorn hope. Pressure is building up in the Senate ? after years of political demagoguery and propaganda ? to change rule 22 of the U. S. Sen ate. The average American hat now been convinced that this rule is a. horrible travesty on the1 de mocratic process of the U. S legis lative branch. e average person has now Convinced that this rule en ables Southerners, or others, to thwart tbe withes of the pre pond erent majority, K the overworked field of civil rights speech-making Rule & 1* the protector of the minority. The very minority pres sure (roup* now working to have it junked stand to suffer most in the long run?if the rule is junk ed or if majority cloture is voted. Here is the aw for rile 22. un emotionally put forward by its First, It takes <4 Senators to shuf off debate. The South has only about eighteen, who would filibuster under the most extreme circumstances. There are M Sana tors. The South '? eighteen could sll oppose cloture, and filibuster, and 64 of the remaining 78 Sena tors (14 could be absent or fish ing) could Invoke cloture. In IMA the rules were changed to eliminate the foolproof filibus ter, which was possible on a mo tion to bring up a bill? as apart from debate on a bill itself. So, if a gopd majority wants to shut off debate, it can be done today. In our past history a determin ed minority has often changed the nation's mind when unwise legis lation was about to be steamrol | lered through Congress. With1 a simple two-thirds of those voting, or 49 Senators, enabled to shut off debate, the great, traditional Grads Should Loot The Pari CoHege graduates Jriil swn Ik A well scrubbed face and ? hope ful heart it not enough. Aside from an ability to do the job, neatness ia the key to all Job interviews. This may not con* aa eaaily aa one would think to a former student, after four yean of wearing mostly sweaters, skirts >bes will need a com plete revamping. A tidy head, the polished pump, dean gloves and the handbag that does not bulge, all these are an important part of that first Impreaaion. Under the beading of good grooming the Job seeker will do well to renew the gloss on her leather pumps and handbag. It ia a good idea to carry an extra pair of white gloves for the band-box appearance. I^you are a job applicant, try free speech of the Senate will be a thing of the past. What has made the U. S. Sen ate a showplace of functioning de mocracy, where freedom of speech was almost sacred, and where a minority could stave off ramrod movements unless two-thirds of the full membership voted to hush their arguments, will have van ished forever. PROTECT YOUR FAMILY BY BECOMING A* MEMBER OF Reins-Sturdivant Mutual Burial Association, Inc. TELEPHONE DIAL AMherst 4 8888 A 25-Cent Fee Is Charged Upon Joining, After Which The Following Due? Are In Effect: DOUBLE BENEFIT Quarterly Yearly Benefit One to Ten Years $ M $ M $100.00 Ten to Thirty Years .40 1.60 200.00 Thirty to Fifty Years __ JO 3.20 200.00 Fifty to Sixty-Fire Years 1.20 4.80 200.00 ed by the int?rvje*$r. The egg-beater and chrys4?the muiTi haircuts ?nd the over-the eye, shoulder-length pageboy stylM are for glamour girts. M K be?t to wear a hat. for H win five you that finished look . ? ' Be well dressed. well mannered. adding ^riACHINES CASH REGISTERS kSN'TALS REPAIRS SALES Smith Printinc Co. SKY-VU DRIVE-IN THEATRE ^./f S" YomA Thurs, GLENN FORD VAfri pyyiira FELICIA FARR Wednesday ? June 4 Zero Hour Dana Andrews Linda Darnell TK? diploma, tynkol of work iccompliikoJ, is one of tk? |radaa(?'i Most cherished possessions. It signifies a milestone in life?aa end, but si so a bef inninf ! With commoncoment comes thoughts of lifo still to bo lived. Knowledge alone is not enough; degrees are not enough. There must bo something more. TtA-ough the Church comes a knowledge of lifo lived for others, of nearness to God, of strength and power which carries one beyond the needs M the present, which makes the individual adequate for taaks too groat far human strength. In the Church you will fool a nearness to God you never felt before, and the more fully you e*?er into the life of the Church, the stronger you wifl become. Why not have a commencement of your own now ? a commencement of life in the Church? Cffrifkt t$$t, Ktultr Ad*. Iirwiw, llrai?f fs ?.?# V i t, ? THC CHURCH POR-ALL . . . ALU FOR THC CHURCH Tin QwA a At pull I fact** mm ?m4 far d? UM* ?f ^Mn |?4 ofattofcjf. I; b ? Iliiiliuii mi I vim*. WMm?I ? Hiw|OwHfc. MAlf cmlnaliM ?? MrttM. Tl?f? am law M?d IMMM r?f*Urljr mmI wpfirt 4w Ototok. TWy wtt (J) fU Im ?wa Hkt. (2) F?r Im <KtMr*a'i mU. (3) Frnr O. of In. MMMMfef mJ (4) F? dw Mk* ?I 4m Qaitk rtwlf. wWW ndi Im Btnl ?4 MMiai w^irt. PWi to f? to AmA Mfalarly sad imJ f mm Mk d..l j. ?m* CMMar tow hwirti IS ?? NM U U ICtrtuWM I IM) L?k? 11 If Cilwli" I Ml MM ? -W Ptmtoi? ) liM Published Weekly in the Interest of the Churchet of Boone and Watauga County by the Fottoutng t WATAUGA HARDWARE, INC. Phileo, MaTtaf Appliances Building Material*, Mftri Pampi COE INSURANCE AGENCY ? ! L < i ' FARMERS HARDWARE & SUPPLY CO. . tnglktai !? , tB*wrt?ri Aainlilil tlaw fcfei SMITHEVS STORE CAROLINA PHARMACY .... ' oil*" ?*?? .. . Wl KKINS-STURDtVANT WJWMMJL ?OME ?eW EWER LIGHT * POWER CO. TODD mOGINS ESS0 SERVICE ?-2 ZZi.'SZ SSI ' THE NOE1H WE^rtlN *AN* A G*4 Baak fenriac ? 8m< Cmatj ys2s.2&Bmmn
Watauga Democrat (Boone, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
May 29, 1958, edition 1
10
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75