Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / June 19, 1941, edition 1 / Page 15
Part of The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, 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
- a inn THE WAYNES VELLE MOUNTAINEER Pasre 19 ifitaineer tant Ad Rates t, word (this typl insertion. rHtimm Giarge fJtTg word each in tn this size type. letter, a--4 jisstractioM in so. Lth. right to miM Lapy foTTdTihould beta P" i.to. than two I (flee n " Li Tuesday. .j. f thinks, and tributes .r, accepted ftt klforu. V Mountaineer Phone 187 JJED-To employ two white 18 years of age. J-or pan L work. Call 260-J before vn. June 1 HAYWOOD COUNTY'S BARGAIN COUNTER SALE Good used piano. See J, Ward, 8 Winfield Street, UnN.C. Junel9 frFoi hound, small female, Itt white and tan spotted ftoed in right ear 19 A. Name collar John Schlemmer, Jr., Irrison, Ohio. If found please :ifv P. C. Mann. Clyde. It 1TMENT FOR RENT Mrs, T. Crawford. June 19. ET License tag from truck, Siynesville and Fines Creek, Mr please return to Floyd lit near Fish Hatchery. It SALESMAN WANTED pABLE AT ONCE nearby Weigh Route. Good opportun ity man over 25 with car. We well established. Route ex- inence helpful but not neces- to start. Write at once, Raw- W'j.Dept. NCF-245402. Rich- H Va. June 19 IT Pair of shell rimmed elass .- - , w near Legion Home Tuesday Reward. Call 425-M. ise 19. - fGER AND sheets and indexes ill all popular sizes, .at w aountameer. SALE-138 acre farm on F Creek. 3 milea West of fitlwood. Approximately 50 Mtleared, about 200 fruit Fj; bout 85 acres in timber. watered. Priced reasona- f See Fred Nichols, care of uiuine, route one, Waynes- June 12-19 BOTHERED WITH people iuS on your land, get ine -no tresspassing iue Mountaineer. fEWRITER RIBBONS for all JMcnmes, In solid black 1 mo red, at The Moon- FOBILE r Good salary and steady e AUl axenange, Sylva, N. C. Jun 12-19 Sfart Results MOVING Your Way! - US E WANT ADS pWSeUaHouse ; Room or Apartment SeU a Used Car SeU Livestock First Jerusalem Conference on World Missions HIGHLIGHTS ON THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON S-21 By NEWMAN CAMPBELL (The International Uniform Lesson on the. above topic for June 22 Is Acts 19:1-35; GaL 2. the Golden Text being Acts 15:11. "But we believe that we shall be saved through the grace of the Lord Jesus, In like manner as tbey") WHILE PAUL and Barnabas "abode long time with the dis ciples" In Antloch, trouble makers were coming from Judaea. These men were Jews who insisted that In order to belong to the Christian church, Gentiles should obey the Jewish laws that had come down to the Jews from the time of Moses. Isn't it odd that practically no group of people can continue long working together, even In a reli gious community, without some one "starting something" get ting some idea of what shall be done which makes dissension? . Now this Idea of making the Gentiles who Joined the church into Jews was repugnant to Paul and Barnabas, who saw clearly that it was not certain laws that certain people of a race obeyed that made a man a Christian, but the acceptance of the Lord Jesus and His message and the gift of the " Holy Ghost. These things showed that they were accepted of God. whether they were Jews or Gentiles. Paul and Barnabas argued with these , men and Anally it was de cided that these two and "certain others" should go to Jerusalem, where the apostles and leaders of the church lived, and settle the matter at the first conference of the early church concerning mis sionary matters. Preached on the Way These men stopped in various cities on their way to Jerusalem, preaching and converting Gen tiles, and causing much joy to the brethren. When they came to Je rusalem they were received by the apostles and elders and then all the things that God had done with them since they were in the city last; At a meeting certain Pharisees who were converted brought up the matter of the Gentiles obeying the Jewish laws. It was needful for them so to do, these men said, or they could not really be Chris tians. Then Peter rose up. He was almost always the first one to speak among the apostles. Peter. Paul and Barnabas were all good Jews, you know, but Peter said of the Gentiles, "God made choice among us, that the Gentiles by my mouth should hear the word of the gospel, and believe. And God. which knoweth the hearts, bare them witness, giving them the Holy Ghost, even as He did unto us." He also pointed out that It would constitute a hardship to the Gentiles to be compelled to obey these laws, and he must have realized, too, the trouble and re bellion It would cause in the. church. Such a controversy might easily destroy it Following Peter, Paul and Bar nabas had their say, and you may be sure they agreed with Peter. James spoke next and he suggest ed that they write to the Gentiles and ask them to "abstain from pollutions of Idols, and from for niflcation, and from things stran gled, and from blood."- This pleased the apostles and elders and they chose Paul and Barnabas and some of their own company to carry the letter to the Gentile Christians at Antioch. So they wrote letters "after this manner," and the chosen disciples carried the letters to Antioch. St. Luke tells us that "Paul and Bar nabas continued in Antioch teach ing and preaching the word of the Lord, with many others also.' Danger Is Averted Thus was a danger diverted from the early church and the lov ing, co-operative spirit of Jesus and His apostles preserved. One other argument arose later On this same subject, which is told ip Galatians 2. Peter, It seems, was chlded by certain elements1 in the church with eating and meeting with unclrcumcized Gen tiles. Peter gave way, but Paul chlded him. "I withstood him to his face," says St. Paul in his letter to the Galatians, "because he was to be blamed." "I said unto Peter before them all. If thou, being a Jew, Uvest after the manner of Gentiles, and not as do the Jews, why compell est thou the Gentiles to live as do the Jews?" Then Paul sums up his religious feelings thus: "Knowing that ft man Is not justified by the works of the law, but by the faith of Jesus Christ, even we have be lieved in Jesus Christ, that we might be justified by the faith of Christ, and not by the works of the law: for by the works of the law shall no flesh be justified." And again, "I Uve by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave Himself for me." America's Oldest Grapevine At Manteo II t I 7 17 i era . ""Of One of the most outstanding historic sites in connection with the anniversary celebrations on Roanoke Island and the 6th season of "The Lost Colony," opening at Manteo, North Carolina, July 3rd, is MOTHER VINEYARD-the nation's oldest grapevine which was planted by Sir Walter Raleigh's pioneers more than 350 years ago. Begin Aluminum Salvage Distributed by Kins features Syndicate. Inc. Dempsey's Girl a Communicant If '., ' ' ... h- 1 1 v lllWllliti h1-- vii pllliiliSSi beginning a salvage campaign to collect aluminum cooking utensils and her scrap metals, the Office of Production Management declares the ipaign may be expanded nationwide if it proves successful in Rich id, Va., and Madison, Wise. Three residents of Richmond make their contribution to national defense. His Measures Called "Socialistic" Joan Dempsey (right), daughter of former heavyweight boxing cham- j pion Jack Dempsey and actress Hannah Williams, is shown with her ; sister, Barbara, after receiving her first communion at St. Laurence ( Academy, New York. The parents have been separated for sometime but both attended the ceremony. .-. . .. Competent Help w oeu Discarded Sen Coal or Wood 1 . ? Words. 25 c BREAKS ANKLE t.ttmarS. Iowa Fay Wells, a Kir. -VinrI Bpninr. had tried , sev eral times to get a date with the irirl In town." Finally she agreed to accompany him to' biic mju ' . Whereupon Fay broke his ankle while swimming. EXECUTRIX NOTICE Having qualified as Execu trices of the estate of Clyde H. Ray, Sr., deceased, late of Haywood County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to exhibit them to the undersigned ' at Way nesville, North Carolina, on or be fore the 16th day of May, 1942, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery All persons indebted to the said estate will please make immediate payment. This the 14th day of May, 1941. JENNIE RAY BREECE, MARY RAY, Executrices of the estate of Clyde H. Ray, Sr, deceased. No. 1074 May 15-22-29-June 6- 12-17. LITTLE CAR PUTS MULLINS, S. C-An automo bile and a freight train collided at a grade crossing here, and as would be expected the automobile was de molishedbut the driver escaped injury. Ten of the freight cars were wrecked. Damage to the rail road was placed at more than $50,000. I '( ; "' ' f "' "i '''aXStflft... -,,i,ir ' Leon Henderson. Agriculture Com ; pound on combed u .-rice administrator, explains to the Senate he arrived at a ceiling price of 42 cents a .n. Cotton farmers on the committee called ma methods socialistic. His Son's In the Navy, Now ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICB Having qualified as administra tor of the estate of Lee Ferguson, deceased, late of the County of Haywood, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceas ed to exhibit them to the under signed at Route No. 1, Clyde, North Carolina, on or before the 31st day of May, 1942, or this notice will be plead in bar of their re covery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make Im mediate payment. f This the 31st day of May, 1941. G. C FERGUSON, Administrator of the Estate of Lee Ferguson, deceased. No. 1078 June M2-19-26-July 3-10. - -AX I , r . - 'Jh &.,t j , !., niiiiii iiifi iTn" - Congret-man Burton B. VnJfiSgSXgZS. A Seabass Out of Water Mrs. David Bass, of New York, and her son took a nap in their eabin cruiser, Stabat; when the tide was high. The tide ran out and they were marooned high and dry on a rock. The boat is shown in the back ground. New York harbor police took mother and son ashore, but they. had to wait for the tide to refloat their boat. - ' Roosevelt Between Hospitals n i i ! ; K, , j ill jv , - ; I 1 ill Xi - w , r --fc- t Sporting a gorgeous shiner Ensign Franklin D. Roosevelt, Jr., third son of the President, is shown with his wife as he left Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, en route to Chelsea Naval Hospital for fur ther treatment before returning to duty at Newport Naval Station in Rhode Island. He was injured when his car overturned after a blowout. , .. . . , ............. Kitten Quints Very Rare j -M r , - 'if , I; I . , ) , 1 fVV - 1 .-: 1 X'-'i I: K ' I u So.-. sWWllllrlrfa mi The storv here has nothins to do with the pretty girl. She's only posing-1 with the quintuplet Siamese Temple cats, a rare event in the cat family. They are owned by rrank weaver, oi fcan uiego, uai. ine girir un yea, her name is Edith Bell. To Organize Women 'r'ff' -.jjw : firr A v x . n . y Mrs. Harold V. Milligan of New York has been chosen by the Gen eral Federation of Women's Clubs in Atlantic City as head of its new department of national defense. She will campaign for organization of. women into a single national pre-, paredness movement. t Wins Defense Award t' ,m 7 j ' m e iiin r" n Eugene Phillips, of Fort Worth,! Tex, is top winner of the $5,000 Revere Award for the best con tri- bntions mod by workers to Ameri-j ca'i defense plan. He created a sys-. tem for the blind landing of air-1 planes, going to work on the idea -when one of his friends crashed to death in aa emergency, landing, j HIS yyiv.
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 19, 1941, edition 1
15
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75