Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Oct. 17, 1947, edition 1 / Page 12
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FRIDAY. 0( ID T0BER GO TO CHURCH SOME WHERE EVERY SUND t: ILLUSTRATED SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON AT THE CHURCHES The Creative Power of Faith By Alfred J. But chr Che (Solicit (Tex . Scripture Hebrew M:1J$ Genesis :!-!. . fffE WAYtfESVILLE MOUNTAINEER 'If ill i. f . FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH fcev. L. G. Ellio t, Pastor . Sunday School at 9:45. Ben Phil lips, general superintendent and all departmental leaders, much en couraged over an increased attend ance to our church school. There were 278 present last Sunday. An interesting general lesson title for Sunday is: "The Creative Power of Faith." Morning worship at 11 o'clock. The pastor will bring an appro priate morning message on the topic: "That Thy People May Re joice." Training Union at 6 30. Director R. E. Fore encouraged over in ' creased attendance to this organi zation of such great importance. A goal of 100 is set for this Sunday. Evening worship at 7 30. On the eve of our revival meeting, the pas tor will deliver a preparatory mes sage on: "With One Accord." Revival services eaeli evening at 7:30, beginning Sunday and extend ing through the following Sunday Hev. R. Knolau Benfield, pastor of the First Baptist church at Hickory, will be guest speaker. Junior and Intermediate R. A 's meet at the i Inn eh at '.',.Mi. We extend a cordial invitation to th public to attend the special se ries of meetings and hear our guest speaker. By faith Noah, being warned of God of things not seen as yet, moved with fear, prepared an ark to the saving of his bouse. By faith, Abraham, when he was called to go out Into a place which he should after receive for an Inheritance; obeyed, and went out. By faith, Abraham, when be was tried, offered up Isaac: and he that had re eved the promise offered up his only begotten eon. By faith, Jacob, when he wu a dying, blessed both the sons of Joseph, and worshipped, leaning upon his staff. MEMORY VERSE IsaUh 13:8. J FIRST METHODIST CHl'K( II WAYNESVII.l.E PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Rev. Malcolm R. Williamson, Pastor Whitener I'reWiM. superintendent of Sunday School Sunday School at 10 o'clock. Morning worship at 11 o'clock. sermon Minject: "laKing ones Stand For Righteousness." The sermon will he based upon the story ol Daniel, a oung man who had the courage to sa "N'o" to evil and to stand up tor God Pioneer and Youth Fellowship groups meet at ti 3(1 o'clock. Rev. Paul Townsend, Pastor Church school begins at 10 o'clock, with classes Martini', at 10:15. M. H. Bowles, supei mlend-ent. Sunday morning worship -eiire at 11 o'clock, with music In the senior choir: Mrs, Fred Mai l in ill rectign. and Mrs. W 1. M.ilh, ;. . or ganist. The sermon will he eiwn l the pastor. Methodist Youth Fellowship will meet in the Boyd Memorial Yonili chapel at ti:30 p.m. There will he no evening .ei i c. with all members imilecl to the re vival service beginning at the First Baptist church. IIAZEI.WOOI) PRESBYTISM AN ( III lit II Methodists Plan Youth Camp, Back Food Saving CHRISTIAN SCIENCE "Doctrine of Atonement'' will be the subject of the l.esun-Sei mon of the Christian Science Church next Sunday morning. The church rooms are located on the second floor ot the Masonic Temple and the service will begin at 11 o'clock. l-kel I pa- I. Hev S fi Crc Preaching at II 1 1 00 a m. by the "Better Things". Sunday School Hi 110 son Suiniiierrow, Supt. Prayer meeting Wed in 7:3(1 p.m. Young people meet (i III) Sundav. Pastor mI SiiiicI;i :'. Sulijeel. a in. I .aw - das. pin Sing Convention To Be On Oct. 19 At Mount Moriah All singers and gospel music lov ers of Has wood county are invited to attend the third Sunday singing convention to be held the afternoon ol October 111 at the Mount Moriah 'CaKerti Baptist church between Hi ex. n il and itosman. ( ; I -i 1 1 1 Winchester, president of the convention, a'nnounces that sev eral quartets, trios and leaders have been imiled to take part, including I he Tone Masters of Asheville, (' Cherokee Indian quartet; the Siofgins male quartet, Chesnee, S. Sontliei iiaires ot ( anion and Kcusta qiiai li I of Brevard. oiher officers of the convention aie W 1,. Harmon, vice president; Mid liuel Whitniire, secretary-treas-ui er The church is located seven mill's Iron) Brevard on highway 64. GRACE CHI RCII IN THE MOUNTAIN'S The Rev. Robert G. Tatum, Rector l!0th Sunday after Trinity. Church School at 9:30 a ni. Morning prayer and sermon at 11 a. m. YOUR CHECK LIST!!! Red Rose Feeds Timothy and Alfalfa Hay Kurfee's Paints Johns-Manville Roofing J-M Asbestos Siding Myers Electric & Hand Pumps Hardware Seed Groceries Fertilizer Plumbing Supplies Coal Logging Tools At Richland Supply Co. Phone 43 At the Depot W.C.T.U. Will Conduct Nov. Membership Drive The Woman's Christian Temper anre union of North Carolina is i oinptel lug its annual invitation for in " members, scheduled for Nov. 1" 1(1 it is announced by Mrs. J. R Hare, district president of the WCT! '. local unions are appointing committees to direct the invitation in ill. ii home communities. The national organization car-rie- on a campaign of welfare work in addition to its major objectives to legallv abolish the manufacture and - ale ol alcoholic beverages. TFACHER FINDS OUT WHAT IT'S I.IKE PHILADELPHIA (UP) Some w hi-per" of "finding out what It's like to be kept after school' greet ed School Teacher Betty Johnston. Mi s .lohnr.ton was correcting p.-iperr in her classroom when the hnitor locked up the school. She i ailed police, but then refused to . limb down a 25-foot ladder which patrolmen hoisted to her window. Two hours later, police located another janitor. W'ho supplied a V r v to the front door. T&ate Tip. WARM C&t j MnDUIUO! .... . 8mi 'automatic, magazine feed. Hold 100 Ibt. of coal. Burnt any kind of coal, coke, briquet. You need ttart a fir but once a year. Heau all day and all night without refueling. Mote than a million now in ujc! CbME IN AND SEC IT HEM.WOOn METHODIST CIRCUIT I!rv J F.. TV Houser, Pastor Conference is over, and the pas tor i hanny to ho returned for an ot tier ye.ir. The services Sunday, Oct. 19 are r follow s M.mle Grove at 10 a.m., Dcllwnod at 11 o'clock and Eliza beth Chanel at 7 p m. Themp for the morning services is "Going Forward With Christ As Our Goal," and for the evening. "By the Sign of the Cross We Conquer". Everv member of the church is un'ed to start the new conference vr.ir right by attending services Sunday. ' Forsake not the assem hlvinr of yourselves together for dnine worship " MtOO. 2 woo. 7M V9fMl BMMt-fcl AatfWMartfc CiiGLE FURNITURE We Deliver Free Installation Clyde, N. C. I.ONC'S CHAPEI. METHODIST CHITRCH Ppv Cecil Heekard, Pastor Church chnol will open at 9:45 n m v.jih service conducted by I! It Terrell. rtio ni'1'- " ill preach at the 11 fVn'-'- ir of worship. Charles ,) will have charge of the mil- .- ic Methodist Youth Fellowship will meet at 7:30 p. m. ST. JOHN'S CATHOLIC CHURCH Schedule of Masses Wavnesvifle Every Sunday 11:00 A.M. Brvson City Every Sunday 8.00 A.M. Canton Rth Sunday 8:00 A.M. Cherokee 3rd Sunday - 8:00 A.M. Cullowhee 2nd Sunday B 00 A.M. Fontana Dam Every Sunday 11:00 A.M. Franklin Every Sunday :00 AM! Highland Every Sunday 11.00 A.M. Murphy 1st Sunday 8:00 AM. Sylva 4th Sunday ;00 AJvL At the concluding session Mon day of the 10 districts in the West ern North Carolina conference, meeting at Charlotte, Bishop Clare Purcell announced that the Metho dist group had decided to erect a $.r)0,000 youth camp near Lenoir. The six-day meeting in Char lotte's Dilworth Methodist church approved the conference world peace committee report opposing universal military training. It adopted a resolution to comply with President Truman's food con servation request, ordained 27 can didates in the ministry, and chose High Point for the 1948 meeting. Churches in the 10 districts have a membership of 223,971, it was announced. The commission on world service and finance reported a successful financial year, with all districts overpaying their benevo lence apportionments and pastors' salaries having been increased. The benevolence apportionment for the Waynesville district was recom mended to be $10,674.54. The youth camp will be erected on a 60-acre site donated by Miss Lelia Judson Tuttle of Lenoir, and opened next year. The conference board of education stated that $26,- tmu already is available for the camp, with the remaining amount between $24,000 and $34,000 to be sought on church school day, Appointments for all church of fiees in the Waynesville district are as follows: District superintendent, C. N. Clark. Andrews, C. C. Washam; Bethel to be supplied; Bcyson Cify, L. R. Akers, Jr.; Canton: Central, C. W. Kirby; First, L. E. Mabry; Chero kee, D. H. Dennis; Clyde, J. E hempley; Crabtree, Mrs. C. O. New ell; Cullowhee, R. T. Houts, Jr. Uellwood, J. E. B. Houser; Fines Creek, P. E. Bineham. Franklin circuit, D. P. Grant Hayesviile, F. R. Davis; Hazelwood ivirs. a. m. Lee: Hiawassee, W. A. Cook; Highlands, to be supplied; Junaluska: Long's Chapel, p. m! Uuckwall; Macon, to be supplied; Morning Star, C. R. Ross; Murphy' W. B. Penny Murphy circuit C A. Smith. Pigeon Valley, V. N. Allen; Rofc- binsville-Fontana, W. T. Medlin, Jr.; Koekwood, G. B. Culbreth Shady Grove, C; O. Newell; Shoot ing Cr.epk, R. L. Poindexter; Sylva, w. wuigg; waynesville, R. L Young; Webster, Raymond W. Mi- ley; West Macon, Mrs. R. H. Hull; Whittler, O. E. Thome. District missionary secretary, P. W. Townsend. District director of evangelism, L. H. Akers, Jr. District director of Bible society, L. E. Mabry. District director of temperance advance, R. L. Young. Student. Duke Divinity School, Waynesville, Q. C, Henry C. Dun can. Student. Drew University, Bethel Q. C, J. W. Blitch. Missionary to Brazil, Waynesville Q. C. C. W. Clay. Missionary to Korea, Rockwood Q C, C. W. Judy. Chaplain, U. S. Army, Franklin Ct. Q C, P. L. Greenl Aoproved evangelist, Cullowhee Q. C. R. T. Houts. - Retired D. E. Cams. F. O. Dry man. J. J. Gray, J. B. Needham, W. H. Pless. W. M. Robbins, R B. Tetn pleton, and J. J. Wood. The Creative Power of Faith HIGHLIGHTS ON THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON .By NEWMAN CAMPBELL (The International Uniform Lesson on the above topic for October 19 is Hebrews 11-13; Genesis 12:1-9, the Memory Verse being Isaiah 12:2, "I will trust, and will not be afraid: for Je hovah, even Jehovah, U my strength.") FAITH MEANS a belief or trust in someone, in his honesty and truth; or in God. We have faith in God when we do not de spair when adversity comes, but have trust that we can depend on His promise to see us through. We can dare to go on and do creative things Just because we do have this faith, and by it can see further than ordinary human beings who do not have it. Paul, a prisoner when he wrote this epistle, calls on those to whom He Is writing to remember the faith of the Saints of the na tion and the church in the past. "Now faith," he wrote, "is the substance of thing hoped for, the evidence of things not seen." "By faith Abel offered unto God a more excellent sacrifice than Cain, by which he obtained witness that he was righteous." fn the Genesis account we are not told in what way Abel's sac rifice was considered better than Cain's. In Hebrews we read that Abel's offering was a lamb, while Cain's consisted of the fruits of the ground. There must have keen revelation from God that the one was acceptable and the other not, as Abel's sacrifice was offered by faith." Noah was warned of God that . dreadful flood ' was cominer. so he prepared the ark in spite of the disbelief and probable deris ion of his friends and neighbors. Thus he saved his family "and became heir of the righteousness .which is by faith." Abraham Has Faith Abraham, living in Ur, was "called to go out into a place which he should after receive for an inheritance," and he "obeyed; and he went out, not knowing- .whither he went." His faith took him to a stranee country, "dwelling in tabernacles with Isaac ana Jacob, the heirs with him of the same promise. ".For He looked for a citv which hath foundations, whose builder and maker is God." . Consider also Abraham's' won derful faith in God when he was ordered to offer up his son, Isaac, as a sacrifice. God had told him that through this son of his, Abra ham's seed would establish a na tion and that Isaac must have sons to fulfill this prophesy. He fully believed that Isaac must die, yet he had the faith to offer mm, this fine, promising boy, be cause uoa naa told him to. faith, too, was justified, because an angel Intervened and the boy was saved. By faith when Jacob was dy ing, he blessed both the Sons of Joseph. Likewise, when Joseph died, he made mention of the de parture of the children Of Israel (from Egypt), "and ,ave com mandment concerning hfs bones." When Moses was born, in that time of peril, his parents saw "he was a proper child; and they were not afraid of the king's command ment." Then when Moses was grown and realized to what dreadful condition his people had fallen, he "refused to be called the sdn of Pharaoh's daughter; choosing rather to suffer affliction with the people of God, than to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season." "By faith he forsook Egypt, not fearing -the wrath of the king; fcr he endured, as seeing Him who is invisible. Kept the Passover "Through faith he kept the passover, and the Sprinkling of blood, lest he that destroyed the firstborn should toucn'tlterri. - "By faith they passed through the Red Sea as by dry land: which the Egyptians assaying to do were drowned. "By faith the walls of Jericho fell down, afte"r they Were com passed about seven das." "And what shall I say more?" Paul asks, referring to the many who had faith In the olden days, to Gedeon, Bamsdh, David -and Samuel; of women who through faith received their dead raised tb life and others who were tor tured, while Still others Wire scourged, mocked, imprisoned, stoned, or sawn asunder, as ft is said was the fate of Isaiah in his old age. "Wherefore seeing we also are compassed about with So great a cloud of witnesses, let us lay aside every weight, and the sin which doth so easily beset, us, and let us run with patience the race that is set before us," In the 13th chapter ot this let ter to the Christian Hebrews Paul admonishes them to "let brother ly love continue. Be not forget ful to entertain strangers: for thereby some have entertained angels unawares. "Remember them that ara in bonds, as bound with them; and them which suffer adversity, as being yourselves also in the body. . , . "Let your conversation be with out covetousness; and be content with such things as ye have: for He hath said, I will never leave thee, nor forsake thee. "So that we may boldly ay, The Lord is my helper, and I will not fear what man shell do unto me." His Distributed by King Features Syndicate, Inc. The Everyday Counselor REV. HERBERT SPAUGH, D. D. CHURCH CHANGES FAITH FRANCONIA, N. H. (UP) A 150-tion frame church which seats 250 people has a new site, and tiew owners. With the aid of rollers and bulldozers, the town's Baptist church was moved 1,000 feet across a field to a new location. It be came a Catholic church. EARLY MATCHES EXPENSIVE CHICAGO (UP) Matches came high in the early 1800s about four cents a scratch. The Encyclo paedia Britannica says the "match" consisted of home containing sulphuric acid combined with splints tipped with 'toi3shim ehlo satt, sugar i&4 turn arable, Are you a procrastinator? Do you put off until tomorrow what you should do today? Is the Mexi can word "manana," meaning "to morrow," a prom inent word in your vocabulary? ii so, men read? this definition off j Vf "manana" tiu , ..'Ji i "j -"IP .j Unknown nuthntf ' which was sent to me by a cor respondent who is a well - knowr news commenta tor: "The watchword of the weary, the slogan of the slumbering, the password of the pepless". That definition is too -good to keep. We Americans need to read that. as we were certainly "sIumberinE" wnen world War I.nd attain when World War II, came upon us. Col- onel Robert L. Scott, famous avt ator of the Army Air Forees and author of the book, "God Is My Co-Pilot," from which a motion picture of the same name was tak en, delivered a noteworthy address in Charlotte, N. C. recently. In -ft he sounded a solemn warning that If we are to avert World "War Ttt and not be destroyed by it, we dare not slip back into the slum bering attitude which we had when World War I and again when World War n came upon us. . He said that Almtchtv cftvi ihok ' already iven us two cliaheea. nA ! ne mam think that we would flfet a third. He Souhdea stfrr&ig iiot of spiritual and military pripsra Hon. He reminded Ti9 that w Ye living in World when. to totalitarian ana goatess "power laces bs. ' , I bavt often quoted Saint Paul's i , 4 I - " 'ft?! , W Abraham's iournev intn ffcTTjjT I will trust, and will not be afraid: for Jehovoh, J ,..r sirengm. -Uaiah U 2, i' nil nil thf lit II, ., H motto lor dealing with evil, H hoi overcome oi evil, om ovcrcoim it, nn,.A " T..,;, I .. evil ""in 6". 1 !.- U.-, il lull lllll i U ,. Iiuulil nr J we nccepieu me nrxi pun ol 1 his ui-i r ui u, ,, iiiunu. uui laneu 10 hu me sccuml tiling uhidirill part in practice. We fouKhl luu i .iml ,i , it wars to keep from being overcome ! On,. ,,t n;iirl , with evil. Now we must overcome j of tin- My , this evil, which is again rearing its 1 "Too Inn,- m t nead, with good. We must nuke :i practical demonstration of Un christian Gospel in the place of world leadership which we ocetipj today. National habits arc formed from : '","' 1 "'' 11,11 H nprsonal bahits Munv ,.f .... i ! '" "' ' "' ' lll,'li M In Hi.- lui.ib! m'I oi '.i;niiiiii j "l:ii-lli up tieasJ "I in i work ii- wbil a nauii oi putting on until lomni - i Hi.il row what we should do today. Life j ,t. , ,h h is maae up oi little things. So when u.uk. .!,,(,, 94, Ask For A DEMOWSTRATI We Tiave installed a RENDIX on our loot may see, without obligation, just liou sirapli ough, and how fast (lie BENDIX noes mr us ior a demonstration at your ninveiueticiu IV mm mm CLOTH! S - SAVING TUMBLE ACTION No agitator, no wringer, no twisting. Evendjnii . thing! Are aafel W ATIR - SAVER CYLINDER Washes big nine-pound load with gallons less hot water. S&vea soap, tool r. XTRA-CLEAN TRIPLI RINSING With this extra thor ough rinsing wbitas coma whiter .. . colors clearer, brighter! BASKET-LEVEL PORTHOLE I No More hoisting! Just tumbla damp dry laundry into basket. !,, V0U J"51 - - l.V the Benu . lonions'l 1 .r I Come ui w - See soap Sogers Eleciric 6 Electrical Conrac" Jhorib 461
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Oct. 17, 1947, edition 1
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