4 EIGHT - 1936 Master De . : v\v : , : "i%* - > : ; ,,,? *: > ' ' * ^ *" * ' ',' ** * ?V. ^ ; ?._ -u . _ New Master De Luxe and Stai advances in appearance and in engir compression engines with full-lengti are among the mechanical improver body is now used on the Standard Thomasboro News ij THOMASBORO NEWS 14 i1 Revival meetings are being js "held at Beulah Baptist church J( this week, conducted by the Rev. | Harrelson. jr Mrs. R. O. Lewis has returned i to her home here after an ex- t tended visit with relatives in11 Laurinburg. c Cornelius Thomas, of Charlotte, was here Friday, calling' J on friends and looking after j business matters. j, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Stone spent Sunday in Burgaw with relatives, j Mr. J. E. Thomas has just j completed a filling station and grocery store combined. ( Mrs. Frank Masland and little daughter, Carol Anne, from! Cleveland, Ohio, spent the week- . end here with her brothers, J.! X. and Henry Stone. i Little Miss Bobbie Bennett is : able to be out again after an ill- 1 ness of short duration. [1 ( PASSING THROUGH ' Captain Alex Lind has been 1 visiting his wife here over the 1 week-end. Captain Lind, is chief < engineer on a yacht from Phila- i delphia. They are on their way, i to Florida for the winter. TEACHERS IN TOWN Mr. C. A. Ledford, Miss Mae < Ledford. Miss Lela Parker, Miss j j Marion Watson, Miss Julia Cro- | martie and Miss Myrtle Taylor,, were Wilmington visitors Wed- j nesday. LITTLE BITS OF BIG NEWS to the woman accused of kill-', ing his only son. The minister ( was the Rev. Benjamin Frank- , lin Root and the woman was ] his daughter-in-law, 30-yearold Daisy Alexander Root. They live in Memphis, Tenn. Make-Believe America's biggest air liner j droned slowly over tropical seas I Saturday night, theoretically flyinor tv>o Pnnifir in dress rehearsal for the soon to be inaugurated plane service between California j and the Orient. The big four-en-1 gined plane was being flown at restrained throttle by Captain Musick in order to determine the maximum range possible with the twelve tons of fuel, 4,000 gallons, carried in the hull and wing tanks. Back To Work A report on the progress of the $4,000,000,000 program to end the dole revealed today that it has not yet provided as many work relief jobsas the relief administration did last year. The Works Progress Administration said the new program had transferred 1,543,185 persons from relief rolls to work relief jobs up to October 26, the latest date for which figures were available. The number of relief cases receiving work program earnings in October last year was 1,998,161. Talking Peace Italy went to Geneva talking peace. "We are not running ^after peace," said a Mussolini spokesman at the League of Nations headquarters, "but we are not refusing to negotiate." There had been heard earlier some talk j that with the sabre of sanctions J hanging over his head, Premier, Mussolini was even ready to con Luxe and Standard Chi ss^sa^ "^$3S?a*kJ^ . . :'";. ...... . ' 1 I rw ~ ? 1?I 11 idard Chevrolet* for lyjo snow mamcu . leering. Perfected hydraulic brakes, high- i I water jackets, and balanced carburetion i nents. The solid steel Turret Top Fisher | as well as the Master De Luxe models. ] ler conquests as his armies have j tc nade in Ethiopia; but this was jL tot borne out in the unofficial ; y statement of his spokesman at g. Geneva who said; "Amy peace a, ;erms, to be acceptable to us, Qf nust recognize first our security 0( Leeds and second our expansion- j. st requirements. That means . . he actual territory so desperate- ^ y needed for the expansion of jn ?ur people." 1st sf Bank Robbers Ith Three youthful men held up two t0 >ank employees and two custom- nc :rs at the Apex branch of the Durham Loan and Trust Com- 01 iany Thursday afternoon and es- 'y ;aped with what bank officials es sstimated might total $1,000. ar m Earthquakes v Earthquakes caused by a geological stimulus of 35,000 years ago shook the eastern section of the ^ United States today and scien- ^ tists predicted more shocks will come. Damage along the eastern gt seaboard was slight, although thousands fled their homes as t they felt beds buckle under them, chairs move along the floor, and saw pictures shake on the walls in the early morning hours. ti| Two Problems jy< Two problems?next year's re- ,al lief program and America's fu- si ture neutrality policy?stood out; b' today from the host of others ot accumulating for the session of1 ft congress that begins January 3 ft ?two months from tomorrow. So y< many other issues are arising for le consideration at the election year j ft session, however, that there is lit- y< tie hope for the short, snappy I term administration chieftains hi had planned. I tc jtt Prodigal Returns "Ive had my day; now it's | ~ someone else's turn," ex-Mayor P James J. Walker insisted when i he was told on his arrival at' New York after three years' exile aboard that he could again be i elected mayor. With Mrs. Walker, j the former Betty Compton, be-, side him, he was bubbling over with happiness as he acknowled-, ged the rousing( welcome that! greeted his return. The Wrong Way j North Carolina drys, after los-1 'ing a fight to halt liquor sales in j 16 of the state's 100 counties by injunction, Friday had left open to them another method?indictment and prosecution. The State I Supreme Court Thursday dismis-1 sed appeals of the drys and as- j serted they had gone about ob-i taining their objective in the; | wrong way. The court, consequently, did not rule on the constitutionality of the local option liquor laws. CERTIFICATES TO BE FILED BEFORE NOVEMBER 16th (Continued from page 1.) seven days after the sale, Criswell added. The original ruling of the AAA was that all cotton sold prior to ! October 23 must be certified in | the county agents' offices by November 1. A 15-day extension has been granted in the time allowed for filing certificates from early sales, Criswell said, and the period including early sales has been extended through October 31. ttMHfijSfijMiK^ *'3 ^ raft 1 nrineing ^ ^f^f^De Luxe spor SSftSsss?^ hstz&Z"* THE STATE i ivrolets are Replete u) ' ' .. A. ' ww i ~ r%* ^~~ f.. .in,I.,.| Either Knee-Action or conventional mod da. The illustrations show: 1 sedan, with built-in trunk; top right, grille, used on all models; lower left, perfected hydraulic brakes, all model i qualify growers for the adistment payments. On the cerficates are recorded data reading the date of sale, the nount of cotton sold, the names ! the buyer and the seller, and her information. The price adjustment payments a grower will be the amount r which the average price of 7-8 ch middling cotton may fall lort of 12 cents on the ten lot markets of the nation on e day the grower sells his cotn. However, the payments canit exceed two cents a pound. Consequently, Criswell pointed it, it is obvious that accuratefilled out sales certificates are sential to calculating the nount of the adjustment payents. ISITORS PRAISES LOCAL FACILITIES (Continued from page one) sing value to Southport and runswick county. Following her return to her udio in Chapel Hill Mrs. Wootn wrote a very interesting letr to friends here. Excerpts om this letter show the high >inion that many up-state resists have of Southport. A por3n of the letter follows: "With all the facilities that >u have there, the deep water : the ocean edge, the nearest ich water to the great shipping isiness of North Carolina and her states, it will be a wonderil thing if you get the terminal tat you have dreamed of for jars. I truly admire your ceasess efforts to get this project irough, and the unselfish work >u are lavishing on it. I am looking forward with iuch pleasure to my next trip i SouthDort. and I aDDreciate le royal welcome that I had lere." GRIST MILL AT WARD'S FARM GRINDS EVERY Saturday For Good Meal and Quick Service Bring Us Your GO RN SEVEN CASES IN RECORDER'S COURT Continued from page 1.) jthe costs, the defendant to reimain of good behavior. Sam Hankins, colored, was | found guilty of transporting li|quor. Prayer for judgment was 1 continued upon payment of the officers fees, the defendant to I remain of good behavior. In the case against Rufus Sellers, white, for making a secret assault, an action of nol pros without cost to the county was taken. TRACES HISTORY OF THE BIBLE (Continued from page 1.) are known to be in existence today and are worth thousands of 'dollars to those fortunate to own j one. Martin Luther in 1522 translaj ted the Bible into German and I his translation is still used in Germany. But Wm. Tyndall's translation has been the domina| ting influence on all the English versions from that day to this. He suffered great persecution at the time he was translating the Bible, was driven into Germany, but from there he sent thousands FOR 7?PURE POLAND-C READY 1 Address BOX Southpo I ==___ I It's Quality That C< CROC i read these ; Friday anc | ?a Garrell 1 SEED OATS, per sack . RICE, per sack 24 pet. DAIRY FEED, 24 lbs. FLOUR 2 lb. JAR PEANUT Bl | v . - ? N. C. J of copies of the new Testament ; i under cover, wrapped up in bales < j of cloth and smuggled into Eng- i ! land in various ways. He was i i finally betrayed by a friend and i j thrown into prison, where he sue- j ceeded in translating all of the j ] New Testament and as far as ] John 2nd in the Bible. He was 1 ! convicted of being a heretic and 1 [strangled to death. After Tyndales death Miles < Coverdale finished translating the I Bible from Chron 2nd, where Tyni dale had stopped. It is said after jail his persecutions that Tyndale ( | could not have lived to see the \ j whole Bible published in the Eng- { | lish language a few years later. 3 In the course of the next thirty [j [years three versions appeared, I, (which may be classed together as ^ the Tyndale-Coverdale group. The ] '.first was called the Matthews , I Bible, editor by a friend of Tyn- \ j dale's which was entirely Tyn- (j f dale's translation as far as Chron. , '2nd, finished by Coverdale. There { j was a preface dedicating it to { j King Henry and a license per- < mitting to be sold within the j i Kingdom. This showed a great f change in sentiment and was a , complete vindication of Tyndale < after all his sufferings on account | of it. The next year Miles Cover dale wa^^^^^o service and , asked ?9new edition | [which he did. He took Tyndale's , j translation as the basis, not his ( ! own, of which only the latter j part was his personal work. This ; [second Tyndale-Coverdale version j was known as the "Great Bible,". ( ! because of its large size. jj | To show the great change in1 ] sentiment in the course of those jj j thirty years, the King ordered a j j [copy of this edition to be set up jin every church in the Kingdom, L [and in St. Paul's church in Lon- i ! don six copies were set up in; i different parts. So great was the [5 [enthusiasm that people came in j c crowds to read the Bible. The j Bishop complained that many ' people read at the time of service and during the sermon eviI dently finding the new Bible more ; ! interesting than the sermon. Thus(i I at last, had Tyndale with Coverj dale's help brought the entire I ' Bible even to the boy who fol- j lowed the plow. The Psalms in t [the Episcopal prayer book as jused today are taken from the | (Great Bible and are Coverdale's! translation, as Tyndale's only went as far as 2nd Chronicles, j They were retained in spite of | many errors, because the people come to love Coverdale's word-! ing. It was he who introduced] into the Bible the expressions:! |"Loving Kindness," and "Tender] Mercy." The Great Bible was revised thirty years later and became the "Bishops Bible." There were two other English] versions which were much used. I [One called the Geneva Bible, the] i work of Puritan exiles during] bloody Mary's reign; another cal-j [led the Rheims?Dovay Bible, by] Roman Catholic exiles after Eli? SALE ] BRED?7 HINA PIGS ro WEAN Inquiry 174 j rt, N. G. j * i And Price Dunts In FJP/ITC SPECIALS FOR j 1 Saturday ? Brothers $4.50 sack $2.10 JITER 30c II j WEDNES sabeth succeeded Mary, the Geneva Bible was very popular. It vas published in 1560, twentyfive years after the first one, ind was a small, convenient size! n clear Roman type. It was the Bible used by Shakespeare, and many copies were probably!; wrought to America on the May! Flower by the Pilgrim fathers. In January, 1604, soon after 3ueen Elizabeth's death, and Fames the 1st had come to the ;hrone, a conference of church eaders was called by the King :o discuss certain religious ques:ions, and it was suggested that i new translation of the Bible be , nade. King James favored the ; dea at once, partly because he ,vas himself something of a ] icholar and liked to display his earning and partly because he vas also dissatisfied with some )f the versions. So, with the king's support, plans were carded out for a new translation, ibout fifty of the leading schol-' irs in the Kingdom were selected ind divided into six groups: two n Cambridge, two in Oxford, and ;wo in London. A certain section vas given to each group and a :ommittee representing all the groups went over the entire work ind prepared it for the press. It vas published in 1611, and has aken its place as one of the nasterpieces of English literature, due to the eagerness and rood judgment with which its luthors kept all that was best in earlier versions. It was the proluct of no single individual but -ather of an Epoch and that Spoch one of the greatest and loblest in English history. That s the Bible we are using today, j The last revision of the Bible iroa hocnin in 15*70 anH was fin- I shed in 1885 and was done by eading English and American j icholars. There was a committee >f thirty-seven for the Old Testa- j WILMINGTON Thurs., Fri., Sat. November, 7, 8, 9. POP EYE CABTOON Paramount Musical LATEST MGM NEWS i ' "* DISCONTIN 24-HOUR After Saturday Effective Winter Hours from 4 a. SERVICE YOl WINTER I Prestone Anti-Fr Weight Oil an Purol Products ai Oi COAST Service SHALLOT iDAY, NOVEMBER 6. t J ment and twenty-seven ?0rTl New Testament. There Was | similar committee in the u-iij States and the suggestions J these American scholars carefully consider d bv the vj lish committee. This is knownl the English revision. There J still room for rnthwr improJ ment so the American coimJ tee continued the work tJ 1901, when they published J American revised version. The jl vised New Testament is qJ more satisfactory than the (J It is so difficult to correct J Hebrew text. The American J dard version is now widely recj nized as the most accurate trj slation among English speafcl people. ? Stop Chills] and Fever] Rid Your System of MclariJ Shivering with chills one moment J burning with fever the next?that's gM of the effects of Malaria. Unless chedal the disease will do serious harmtojiB health. Malaria, a blood infection, J for two things. First, destroying the! fection in the blood. Second, buHjH up the blood to overcome the eSectsB the disease and to fortify against iimiB attack. . I Grove's Tasteless Chill Tome sip* both these effects. It contains taalB quimne, wnicn kuis tee injection it blood, and iron, which enriches i builds up the blood. Chills and le soon stop and you are restored to ha and comfort. For half a century, Gro Tasteless Chill Tonic has been sure it for Malaria. It is just as useful, too.i general tonic for old and young. Pita to take and absolutely harmless. Safe give children. Get a bottle at any d store. Now two sizes?50c and $1.1 $1 size contains lx/ times as nuchas 50c size and gives you 25% more _ 0 WII.MI.VGTOM lina II HE TRAPPED SPIES ONLY ! TO BE TRAPPED HIMSELF I ; BY A RAVISHING 8EAUTY1 I i ^ I 1- I mmm ROSALIND RUSSELL BINNIE BARNES K LIONEL ATWILL M Mfto cc.;*v. MA'S (CT* Cartoon^^jj^K r?? ???? UING OUR I SERVICE! ', November JI During I Season I . m. to I a. ml JR CAR FOR -'AVl T ii , ? eeze. . . Winter I d Lubricants nd Quaker State ROAD I Station TE, N. C.

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