T r FAGb Sia. (second section)' IDAY, FEBRUARY t, nifc WAYNESVTLLE MOUNTAINEER GO TO CHURCH SOME WHERE EVERY SUNDA What. We Know About Jesus ILLUSTRATED SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON Everyday -Scripture Jehp 6;3$--tA MiS-Us CoUsumi 1.9-.20,- r -S C?L' AT THE CHURCHES PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Rev. M. R. Williamson, Pastor Whitener Preost, superintendent of Sunday School, which meets at 10 o'clock. Morning worship at 11 o'clock Sermon subject, "Winning God's Approval." Pioneer ami Yuuth Fellowship meetings at 0:30 p. in CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHl'RCH "Spirit" will be the subject uf the lesson-sermon at tne Christian Science service next Sunday morn ing, February 8. Church rooms are located on the second floor of the Masonic Tem ple and the serwre will be held at 11 a. in. Siting with His dlaciplea, Jesus rose from the Uble. laid aside His garments, "and took a towel, and girded Himself." After that Hf . poureth water Into a basin, and began to wash His disciples' feet and to wip them with the towel Peter said, "Thou shalt never wash my feet," but Jesus said. "If I wash the not, thou hast no part of M." "I have givtv. you an exampla, that y? should, do as X havsdon. to you." FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Rev. I. C. Elliott, Pastor Sunday School at 9:45. Hen Phil lips, general superintendent. Kind your places in the classes of our j church school as we study another great lesson title: "What He know About JeMIs; His Nature." There were 24-1 present laM Sunday. Morning wor-lnp al 11 o'clock. The pastor brin?- an appropriate , mes.'.a.i'e on "Honesty in Steward- ship" I Ins ) Stewaidslup Dav throughout the South. Mis. 1. E , Green will lead the ehon in nu' ing. "Send Out I h I.itfht b Gounod. j This -.ei a lee will he broadcast over radio -tjtiuii Wtliv Training l.iui.u .it b :in. The or ganisation (oiiliiine-5 to -Huh topic lindei the theme ol the Near Fol low Mi ! Evening win ship at 7 30, The' pat'tor loiuiiuir- d -eties oi sec- i moils on great women ot tlie Bible,' Uilllg fluln the fi.i.K ol E-lhei. t he topic: " l he Unman Whose rieail( Saved a Nation Woman s Ml-.-i.Uijf Js.ieiety hae iiionthlv bu-iiie-- an.) pio ' gram meeting Tne-da. ut 7:30 m Welch Memorial hall Heruietta Hail Shuck iiKle pit-em topn of the month. j Midweek worship and choir re- i heai-al on We.ine . at 7 30 Ttie church, joiiui.s; a -outi.wide Bible study on the Hook ul F.plie-i.ins. uses this hour to lejin tlie dm"-'. trines ot the chuith from thi-. Pauline epi-lle, as taught by tlie! pa-;tor ! (The (Soldett icxl n What We Know About Jesus: His Nature HIGHLIGHTS ON THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON FIRST METHODIST CHl'HCH Rev. R I. Young, Pastor Sunday School, lo a in. Morning Worship, 11 am. Pustoi -, tin-in,-, "in Whicfi ' J Choosi The Boy Scouts, with their Scoutmaster, Paul McElroy, will attend this service and sit in a body. Since this is Boy Scout Week, they will be gien special recog nition by ushering and receiving the morning offering. Evening Woisliip. 7. 30. p.m. Pro fessor Chailes Isley will lead the Youth Choir in special music and the congregation In singing their favorite hymn. The pastor will con tinue the series ol messages on the Apostle's Creed. The public is invited to come and enjoy this service. Tlie Methodist Youth Fellowship will meet at 0:30 All Young Peo ple, including intermediates, are invited to attend this fellowship. The Youth Choir will meet for rehearsals, 7 o'clock, Tuesday evening, and the Adult Choir at 7:30 o'clock, Wednesday evening. All members are. urged lo be pres ent. The Woman's Society of Chris tian Service will have the regular monthly meeting at the church, 3:30 o'clock. Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. C. N. Clark will have charge of the devotions. The Board of Stewards and the Trustees will meet at the church, 7:30 o'clock, Wednesday evening. This is a most important meeting. Let all members of the two boards be present. TRUTH TABERNACLE Seventh Day Adventist Beech St., Hazelwood L. P. Kneeht, Pastor Sabbath School at 9:45 a.m. Saturday. The lesson theme will be "The Two Mysteries". Preaching at ll a. m. on the subject, 'Pure Religion". Sunday night preaching at 7:15 .p m. on tha subject, "Ten to One". By NEWMAN CAMPBELL (The Intel national Lesson on the above topic (or Krbru.uv H is John 6 35-40. 13 3-17. 'olus-ilans 1 9-20. the Memory Vcie bring John 13 34. "LCc ulic aliotlicl, rVcn dS I have luVed you") WHAT DO we know about Jesus His lite wlillr He a- on earth, associating With llicn ful a few brief yraia1 Wc know little of His boyhood, just one ur two iniident-i Ot Hi manhood We knOW mole ahd When thlliK ibout It Wc klioW Hiln Weil be cause He iicyci -.hanged He was aiVid dying fuoJ, speaking truths fearlessly Condemning tne wrong, opholair,-; the light He WaJ tender and -.-jmpassioiiate. whether it was with little iTul Jren oi with sinning human Ce ir.gi like the rich young luici or M&ry Magdalene What docs He 6a.y OI Hllliiclf ' John quotes HllTi 1 alii the Llead Of tile he that Cullleth lo Me shail never hungei . and he that beliewth on Me shall never thiret Those words tcmm.l us of a recent lesaun where He was talking with the Samaritan wo man at the well But I said unto you that ye also have seen Me, and brhcvr not " To Us It SerlllS llnpoSSlblr that those working with .Irsus. living with Him day after day teeing what He did, hearing what Hf said, never really knew Him until after His crucifixion and res urrection. When He was gone from them, they probably remembered what He had said, such words as This Ls the will of Him that sent Me, that every one that sceth thr Son, and believelh on Him. may have everlasting life and 1 will raise him up at thr last day What He Did in l erea These words Jesus .spoke in Capernaum, but those He spoke In John 13, and the scene follow ing took place in 1'creu, east oi the Jordan nvcfr Jcsils and His disciples all of them -weir at supper on a Thursday ru-zht t In Last 'Supper befoir He was he. trayed by Judas I.s anct After supper Jesus rose, Oivc.s'cl Him self Of His outer paimi-nis and took a towel "and gilded Him self" Then the Lord poured water into a basin and, kneeling before first one and then another of His disciples, He washed their teet and dried them on the towel which was about His waist. Ima gine tlit disciples' amazement' What must they have thought? Yrt none pioteated until Jesus c.tmr to Simon Peter, who said, "is T'l doit Thou wash my feet?" Jesus' aiiswci is a little confus ing to us. possibly, and to Peter at the moment "What I do thou kh.iwcst not now. but thou shall kliovV lie-leaf ter " l elci aaid firmly. Thou shalt i.eiei wasli my feet," and Jesus aiisweied, If I wash thee not thou hast no part with Me " Pe ter evidently thought it was not light for their leader to perform smli an bumble task, but Jesus wanted to teach them a lesson on this last night He was to spend won them Peter protested that if the Lord insisted on washing his feet, he should wash also his hands and his head, but Jesus said that was not necessary "ye arc cleaii. but fiot all," He said, km. wing that in such a short time Peter would deny he ever knew Hoi,, and all would forsake Him Then Jesus made His lesson elcai to them If I then, your Loid and Master, have washed your feet ye also ought to wash one another's feet "For I have given you an ex ample, that ye should do as I have done to you "Verily, verily I say unto you, Tlie servant is not greater than his Lord; neither he that is sent -reater than He that sent him." "If ye know these things, happy are ye if ye do them." No task should be too lowly for Christ's followers. He came to serve; so should we. Paul Write- From Prison In his last imprisonment in Rome, Paul wrote to the church in Colosse, once an important Greek city in the province of Asia. Paul was worried about these Colossians because there a philos ophy was being taught that de nied the divinity of Christ, and lie was afraid the Colossians might be tempted to adopt it. "For this cause," he writes, "we also, since the day we heard It, do not cea.se to pray for you! and to desire that ye might be filled with the knowledge of His will in all wisdom and spiritual under standing . "That ye might walk worthy of the Lord unto all pleasing, being fruitful in every good work, and increasing in the knowledge of God." "And, having made peace thiough the blood of His cross, by Him to reconcile all things until Himself, by Him, I say. I whether they be things in earth, i or things in heaven." Uuli it.iiud by King Ffihirra Syielical. Iic. LONG'S CHAPEL METHODIST CHURCH Lake Junaluska Paul H Duckwall, Pastor Sunday, Feb. fi: Sunday School at 9:45 a.m.; morning woiship at 11 o clock, with the sermon. To ward Racial Understanding." Methodist Youth Fellowship at 7 p.m. Monday at 7 p m . Troop 8. Br, Scouts of America. Tuesday at 7 p.m., Aduli Fellow ship covered dith supper. ST. JOHN'S CATHOLIC CHURCH Schedule of Masse I Bryson Cjty j 1st & 3rd Sunday 8:00 A.M. i Canton 5th Sunday .... 8.00 A.M. Cullowhee I Ut Wednesday 7:00 A.M. , Font aria Dam 2nd Saturday 8:00 A.M. j Franklin 2nd Sunday 8:00 A.M. Highland:- j 3rd Saturday 8:00 A.M. Murphy--1st Saturday .. 8:00 A.M. Syl.a - 4th Sunday . 8:00 A.M. V v lit- ville Evi l Sundav 11:00 A.M. Scalf's Indian Riyer Harmoneers Hear Theae Fine Sinters Orer.WWNC " DIAL KOtAX. Uk.J SiiX 'mtaUGJL HUBAX PI Of f VNS TO RULE Ti: .. . .C IN ATLANTA ATLANTA, Ga. (UP) Atlanta is planning to install the longest stretch of new-type traffic lights for pedestrians only in its north east section soon. It will be a three-mile stretch, (he longest of such lights in the country. The lights, chiefly for areas where pedestrians have dif ficulty in crossing against heavy traffic, will work this way: The pedestrian pushes a button on a post at the curb, waits for the light to change its next regular cycle, I hen crosses wth ampte time to reach the other side. After that, the light changes back to green for the motorist. So long as the button is not pressed, motor traffic continues uncliepkeLv jf y ' Jesus washes tht disciple' feet. "love an another; even as I have lovtd you. "-John ISiii. Special Sermons Given By Rev. L, G. Elliott Here In spite of the unfavorable weather last Sunday evening a number of people were present to hear the fust sermon in the series on Great Women of the Bible. The Rev. L. G. Elliott, pastor of the First naptHt Church, spoke on "Ruth, the Woman of Flawless Character". The subject of the minister's second sermon on Sunday evening will be: "Tlie Woman Whose Beau ty Saved a Race". Beauty may be vain, but not always so; not when beauty of face and body is joined to beauty of soul, he said. There is a beauty which ran inflame and destroy men. The disastrous influ ence ol the' beauty of Helen of Troy is history's number one wo man whose beauty dyed the seas with blood and almost destroyed two nations. But the story of Esther is a drama showing how God used the beauty of one woman to save a na tion from destruction and carry forward his eternal purpose. She came "to the kingdom for such a lime as Ibis". The winsome beauty and the determined courage of this woman should attract the atten tion of both men and. jw-onoii of Waynesville, especially young wo men. The public is cordially in vited to hear this interesting series of sermons. READY TO GIVE MORE SPRINGFIELD, Mass. lUP) Alter donating his blood for the 126th time, James W. McConnell, a World War I Navy veteran, said he tell "just fine." He hopes to make 50 more donations. Great Qraridfahr Turns Painter. At Age Of 82 MALDEN, Mass. (UP) A great grandfather, who started painting at the age of 82 to take his mind off family troubles, has attracted the attention of art teachers and sudents. Now 83, Everett C. Ilea has pro duced more than 100 paintings in a year. Several of his water-colors have earned the plaudits of the critics. Ilea retired from work in the cut ting room of a Ijiilling mill If) years ago. Most remarkable, according to the critics, is Ilea's ability to de pict the coldness of a stone house in a wintry setting and the swirl ing of water around rocks along a stretch of typical New England coastline. -By lifiv. hiibrt SPAuqn, d. d. What are you carrying . arpu.ng in, heart of the critic Tabby Goes Into Stove By Owner's Error KOKOMO. Ind. (UP) Tabby, a quiet house cat, was the victim of a cold weather accident. ' She curled up in a coal bucket near the stove and went to sleep. Next morning, her owner awoke and sleepily tended the fire. He picked up the coal bucket and heaved the contents into the stove, Tabby included. The cat died be fore her frantic master saw his mis take and pulled her out. your hand, a handshake or. a hm- nier? The Associates rress reiares a story from Marion, Ind.., whre a 16-year-old boy was walkjiuj akng carrying a heavy wrench. He came to railroad tracks where' he! saw af padlocked switch He. battered, the lock off, threw the switch, then, waited around to see what, hap pened. Soon a train came along, ran into the open switch and . was wrecked. The boy was apprehend ed by the police, and asked why he did it. He said. "I don't know. I just wanted something to do." Many of us are like that boy. We walk along with a hammer in haixd, waiting for something or someone to knock. The world is filled with wreckage caused by such' an atti tude. A hammer can be a useiul in strument in construction, hut a, vi cious one in destruction. This boy's hammer caused a train wreck and the injury of three trainmen. I once saw in an office this mot to, "Come in without knocking, and go out the same way." Some people seem to take an unholy delight in "knocking" oilier people. The ha bit is vicious and downright de structive. It destroys happiness for, all concerned. Unkind criticism even brings unlrappiness into the nomes, enurclies, lmsint nations themselves. Many of you who Ita, cufforina 1,.... ujnunrlc ir.rt;... . . . """T' ""IKICU liv ll,. .WiWHei UAVWS OI Crilil-isff pa. by others. So,,,,, (l( ' kl--,.,n ..,UlL f v.wuWn you Vmisehtj cu. i Throw that luinm,.,. represents jealousy, hate. It will eonlaiiiinai. well as injure those aeaim, vkll Ilea it A ! , .1. n., lout as vmi-j . - L . ' " -I youie 10 oe tempted to J aim i. careiui, uure J use u on inose wlitm, )(l love your wile. our , your children, -uur your minister. Vou ing to wound those W1(J1 ready to help you. You re j need t tliat help bailh 5unit, you uon t need it n,m. y I even una that th,. iep-( you desperately im i driven away by bUm- u tu mer, 1-1. . I. . . i iiiruw inai iiaiiinifi m, exten,d that hand m e. trienusnip, encuurageinai member that love is tlie m erful force in (he uuild J stronger than hate. Your Washing Done Automatically With a BENDIX Automatic Washer For As Little As 20c A WEEK ROGERS ELECTRIC CO Phone 4G1 Your Ben4ix Dealer Main Strf Blue whales feet in length weight. often exceed 100 and 100 tons in L EM OX mm MEAN QUALITY In HOME HEATING FHA TERMS NO DOWN PAYMENT SEE US TODAY OflTPRNV Phone 1337 88 Broadway Aahevllle, N. C. TO THE PEOPLE OF THIS AREA, Many Thanks for a Big Job, Well Done- Fellow Citizens, I thank you for your splendid help in over-subscribing our $3,200 March of Dimes quota for the Infantile Paralysis fund. Success was accomplished by the generous donations of thousands of you good citizens and the untiring efforts of several hundred of my loyal co-workers. It is impossible to thank each of you individual ly except through this medium. I thank you for your interest qnd money on be half of those in our immediate area and through out the nation who need our help. DICK BARBER, Chairman MARCH OF DIMES WAYNESVILLE AREA NATIONAL POLIO FOUNDATION This space paid for by Richard Barber

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