MARSHALL, N.
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WOODSON W. RAY, INC
INSURANCE AGENCY
Route 1 Phone: 689-2021
MARS HILL, NORTH CAROLINA
the following old line stock insurance
I
AETNA, PROVIDENCE
WASHING, GREAT AMERICAN
FIREMAN'S FUND, MARYLAND
CASUALTY AND JEFFERSON
STANDARD LIFE
1 1
Fir, Casualty, General Liabilit y ,
' Compensation, Automobile and
Life Insurance
Homo Owners, Farm Owners, and Multi-Peril
Package Policies
YOUR BUSINESS IS ALWAYS APPRECIATED
Willis
Singing Date Is
Changed; To Meet
Sat. At Alexander
The 2nd Sunday nifrht singing
which has been at the Alexander
Baptist Church for several years,
has been changed to the 2nd Sat
urday night in each month.
We are expecting a large crowd
and lots of good singing this com
ing Saturday night, which will be
June 12, at the Alexander Church
beginning at 7:30. So ocome be
with ue.
DENNIS PARRIS
Laurel Baseball
Club To Sponsor
Skating Party Fri.
The Laurel Baseball Chili is
sponsorin (ra skating party (in
Friday, June 4, at 7:00 p. m., at
Marshall Park. Special singers
and dancers will be featured.
AoVnission will be $1.00 for
adults and 50c for children under
12. All refreshments will be serv
ed free of charge once the admis
sion is paid.
Renew Your
Subscription To
The Newt-Record
CLAYTON WILLIS
IS WINNER OF
DEKALB AWARD
Clayton Willis, of Man Hill,
has been announced as the winner
of the 1966 DeKalb Agricultural
Accomplishment Award given to
outstanding seniors ill vocational
agriculture department
To receive this award, he ex.
celled in scholarship and farm
program activities d urine his four
yesrs in high school. Clayton is
the son of C. N. Willis Jr., and
attends Mars Hill High School,
where he has been sentinel of PFA,
reporter of 4-H, vice president ot
Freshman class, winner in district
Soil and Water Management in
1964, chairman of livestock sno
leadership committee and mem
ber of the football and basketball
teams.
Clayton will also receive an
award as District State Star Farm
er in June at the FFA Convention
in 1965. His farming program
consisted of raising registered
Hereford cattle, grain crops, to
bacco, and hay.
He plans to attend Asheville
Buncombe Technical Institute.
Han
f a. a a
Athlete Leeds Mars
Hill Senior Class
Charles ToUey, son of Mr. and
Mr. Fred Tbitoy. is valedictorian
of Man Hill High School with an
average of 96.45. He will attend
Ctenuon University on a four-
year athletic scholarship. He has
served as president of the stu
dent body this year.
Booby Rice, son of Mr. and Mrs.
D. C. Wee is salutatorisn of Mars
HOI High School with an average
of 08.91. He will attend Mars
Hill Collage with a partial scho
lastic scholarship.
,
4-H CAMP WEEK
SET FOR COUNTY
Four-H dub wewhsni in Madi
son County wQl attend Camp
Schaub near Waynesville during
the weak of July 12-17.
Boys and girls belonging to a
community 4-H dob had an op
portunity to eat slides on the camp
during the month of April
There are many former 441
members tiring in communities
where dubs have not been organ
ised. Any boy or girt m these
communities who bat ben a 4-H
member or would like to join a
community club when organised
may attend 441 camp this sum
mer. If you would like to attend,
please contact the County Agent's
office in the courthouse and your
name win bo added to the list of
those to receive further informa
tion on the camp. Mail your let
ter of request to attend camp to
Karle Wise or Barbara Rhodes,
Marshall. We need your name,
father's name and address by June
1 if you plan to attend.
OBSTACLES
A man may be the architect of
his own future, but he still can't
get the sun in every room.
International
Sunday School
Lesson
for
JUNE 6, 1965
These comments sre based
on outlines of the Interns-
tional Sunday School Leg-
sons, copyrighted by the In-
Irritations! Council of Ke-
ligioas Education, and used
by permission.
.
WHEN AUTHORITY
IS REJECTED
Memory Selection: "A wise son
maketh a glad father: but a fool
ish sen is the heaviness of his
mother." Proverbs 10:10.
Lesson Text: t Samuel 15:1
through 19:10.
The problem that confronts us
in our leeson today is of especial
interest to those among us who
are parents; it is how may we
help our children develop respect
for authority in the realms of the
home, the school and later
at work . . . ?
Much can be learned from the
tragic events in King David's life
especially if it is borne in mind
that "the sins of the fathers shall
be visited upon the children." Da
vid was a great man in his day;
he did much for his people, and
much in the service of God. He
was, however, a very human be
ing, and he made his mistakes.
He had been guilty of both adul
tery and murder; he had worship
ed false gods. And these defec
tions were not unknown to Absa
lom, his son.
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18 oz. Assorted
JELLY 25c
Nancy Jane Self -Rising
FLOUR 25-lb. Bag - - $1 .69
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DOG FOOD 3 for ---- 21e
1 ' ' ' "
Bama
MAYONNAISE Pint Jar 29c
Two Bath Size
CAMAY SOAP 25c
12-oz. Can
SPAM 45c
Dixie Grocery
MARSHALL, N. C.
Jlfpissnn 1' JSasBBSHfliL? l?fffiiifnnannnnn Hnaaaaf
Hssa ass. Hunm
STAY S0UIH, YOUNG MAN!
Absalom was shrewd; he was
ambitious; and a past-master in
the art of strategy. He was pop
ular with most of the people, and
would doubtless have made an ex
cellent king had he but disciplined
himself in the ways of righteous
ness. His brother Amnon's assault on
his sister Tamar, and the resulting
unhandiness, moved Absalom
greatly. When David evaded pun
ishing Amnon, Absalom took the
law into his own hands and put
Amnon to death. Fleeing David's
wrath, Absalom laid the ground
work for his being proclaimed
king a goal which he kept fore
most in his mind after David's
eventual forgiveness and accep
tance of him again in his house
hold.
Poor David I How greatly he
must have suffered one son
slain by another, and the surviv
ing son plotting against his
throne even to the point of do
ing away with his lather! How
bitter must have been his self-recriminations
when he realized his
failure with his children. For
while he realized he had a position
of great responsibility to his peo
ple, as king of the Hebrews, he
was - first and foremost a
father. This fact is most appar
ent in his pleas to his generals:
"Deal gently for my sake with
the young man, even with Absa
lom" (2 Samuel 18:5) and in his
heartbroken cry: "O Absalom,
my son . . . ." That his son fol
lowed the father's actions rather
than heeded the father's words
was a heavy burden for David to
bear, indeed.
Too often, our children follow
the example of what we DO,
rather than what we SAY. In our
love for them we excuse their de
fections sooner than face the pain
ful task of disciplining them. And
when, through lack of self -discipline
and training to differentiate
between right and wrong, they
come a cropper," we blame it
on anybody and everything except
ourselves !
For while it is true that the
church and schools have a cer
tain amount of responsibility in
teaching today's youth to have a
proper respect for authority, and
to differentiate between what is
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zjght and what is wrong, the main
responsibility lies in the home.
The home is the cradle where
character is formed . . . and it is
formed by parental example rath
er than parental platitudes.
Absalom never learned to1 love
God, and Was never able to follow
His will. Are we fostering in oar
children a hive for Got that will
transcend all human weaknesses
and failings when life puts them
to the test (as life inevitably
will!); are we teaching them re
spect for law and order during
their sojourn on this earth? And,
above all, are we teaching them
a willing submission to God's au
thority in their lives? If we are
not, then we are failing in our
duty as Christian parents.
ON YOUR GRADUATION DAY, will your
dreams be bold? They should be ... for horizons
are as limitless as the skies today for young men
of character and ability, vision and faith.
Hold those dreams high, young man. Stay South
and see them come true. For the South is a great
and fast-growing opportunity-land where your
ambitious dreams can become reality.
Over the past decade the South outpaced the
! 81 business activities surveyed by
.Along South-
through 1964
nation In 86 oi
businessmen invested UVz billion in 3,833 maj
industrial developments. These development .
alone provided more than 180,000 new employ
ment opportunist.
Look ahead -stay South, young man. Stay
South and grow with America's fast-growing
opportunity-land!
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Tobacco companies are demanding a top
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IHkafi him watt a ati.T. A. A 1.
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SHh
V