Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / May 31, 1956, edition 1 / Page 17
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East Waynesville Baptist Church WOODLAND DRIVE **1 ?u OUd when they said un to Me, Let ui go into the houoo of the Lord.'' Psalma-lttL FRIDAY? J:00 p.m.?Preparation day (or Vacation Bible School for all ?tu- : dent* and faculty. SUNDAY? 10:00 a.m.?Sunday School. R. H. Galloway, Superintendent. 1 11:00 am. ? Morning Worth tp Service. Measage by the pastor. 7:00 p.m.?Training Union. J. L. McElroy, director. 8:00 p.m.?Evening Worship Ser vice. Song service. MONDAY? 0:00 a.m. ? Our Vacation Bible School will start this Monday and 1 continue for the next two weeks, ' Monday through Friday. Hours of school will be 9 to 11:30 a.m. Mrs. Leroy Harrell, the principal and all the faculty invites all the boys and i girls in East Waynesville commun- 1 ity to attend our Bible School. < WEDNESDAY? I 7:30 p.m.?Prayer Meeting and song service. Monthly business meeting. If you are not attending Sunday School or Church anywhere, we in- 1 vita you to come worship with us. ' Visitors are welcome. Ninevah Baptist Church The Rev. C. L. Allen, Paster SUNDAY? | 10 SJn.?Sunday School, Roy , Davis superintendent. Rufus Lera ing, Associate Superintendent. Sermon by the pastor every see- , ond and fourth Sunday mornings at 11 o'clock, and every first and . third Sunday nights at 8:00 o'clock. 7:00 p.m.?Training Union, Ruf us Leming, Director. WEDNESDAY? 7:30 p.m.?Prayer meeting. i Visitors are welcome. Free Methodist Church j The Bar. Rueefl M. Oder, Paetae , Telephone OL 8-3387 , Assembly and Oak Streets, Waynesville SUNDAY? Sunday School, 10:00 a.m. Morning Worship, 11:00 ajn. Young.People's service, 7:00 p.m. Evening Evangelistic Service, 7:43 o'clock. WEDNESDAY? 7:45 p.m.?Bible Study. First Baptist Churd) HAZKLWOOD, N. C. The Re*. Me hw Khnr, Peelee ?A Gravhf Chereh ie a SUNDAY? 0 Sunday School?9:45 a.m., Tal ma dge Woodard, Superintendent. Morning Worship ? 11:00 a.m. Sermon by the pastor. Training Union ? 7:00 p.m., Prank Saunders, Director. Monthly Church Conference ? B:00 p.m. Aeeeunaeminte red Activities The nursery will be open during ill services Sunday. We are equip ped to care for children of all ages. FRIDAY, June I?Preparation Day for our. Vacation Bible School will be from 9:00 to 11:00 a.m. All chil dren who plan to attend are urged to be present at this time. MONDAY? 6:45 p.m.?The Brotherhood will meet in the Hazelwood School Lunchroom. This is ladies night ?nd the men will have as their luests their wives. TUESDAY? 7:00 p.m.?The five circles of the WMS will meet. The place of these meetings will be announced in the twlletin Sunday. WEDNESDAY ? 7:00 p.m.?Vacation Bible School faculty meeting. 7:30 p.m.?Weekly Bible Study In the Book of Romans will con tinue. 8:15 p.m.?Weekly choir practice. THURSDAY? 7:30 p.m. ? Monthly Workers Council meeting at the church, FRIDAY? 7:30 p.m.?Executive committee meeting of the Brotherhood. June 4-15?Vacation Bible School in our church. Classes will begin tach morning at 8:30 and will con :inue through 11:30. We are pre pared to care for all children from the nursery age through the inter mediate group. Liberty Baptist Church The Rev. D. D. Rumen. Faster 10:00 a.m. ? Sunday School Lloyd Teague, Superintendent. 11:90 a.m.?Sermon by pastor. Everyone la cordially Invited. The Church in Europe THE SPIRIT OF JESUS 3ENDS PAUL INTO NEW FIELDS Scripture?Acts 15:36? THE APOSTLE PAUL was a restless, energetic man. Before his conversion he persecuted the Christians with vigor. After his change of heart and life he could not be inactive for long. He had a constant urge to travel, spread ing the gospel of Christ wherever he went. From Antioch, where he began all his missionary journeys, he suggested to Barnabas that they go again to visit the cities where churches had been established to "see how they do." Barnabas was willing, but he insisted upon tak ing John, surnamed Mark, with him. Paul disagreed, and they argued until Paul took Silas and Barnabas took Mark. This is the last reference to Barnabas in the Book of Acts. Barnabas and Mark sailed to Cyprus, Barnabas' origi nal home. Paul and Silas* traveled to Asia, through Syria and Cilica. At Derbe Paul met a young man whose mother was Jewish and his father Greek. This was Timothy who became his spiritual son, a true believer to whom Paul was Apostles to be beaten, then threw them into pyson. During the night a great earth quake opened the prison doors so that everyone could have gone free. Paul and Silas had been praying and singing God's praises before the shock came. The jailer, who had been chosen to guard them, was about to kill himself, thinking that all prison ers had escaped, but Paul called to him that no one had freed himself, and the jailer was so im pressed that he took the Apostles to his house, fed them, cleansed their wounds, and was baptised with his household. The Apostles then moved on. They were driven out of Thessa lonica by jealous Jews. At Berea they found devout Bible students. Then Paul went to Athens where he was shocked by the numerous statues of heathen gods and god desses. Seeing an altar erected 'To the Unknown God," he made his famous speech from Mars' hill. Some believed, some scoffed; others said they would hear him again. Leaving Athens, Paul went MEMORY VERSE "Be not afraid, but apeak, and hold not thy peace; for I am with thee."?Acta 18:9-10. to address his last epistle while he was a prisoner in Rome. Tim othy went on with Paul and Silas. After receiving a message from the Spirit that they were not to preach in Asia, Paul had a vision at night A man appeared to him, begging, "Come over into Mace donia and help us." Paul probably had never been in Europe, but he obediently set sail for Macedonia. Coming to Fhiltppl, "chief city of that part of Macedonia," they went to a riverside on the Sab bath and met Lydia, a business woman, seller of purple, who wor shiped God, and she, listening to Paul, was baptised, inviting the Apostles to accept the hospitality of her house. Very briefly we may mention the girl whose masters made a great deal of money by her pro phesies. She kept following the Apostles, crying, "These men are tne servants of God, which shew us the way of salvation." Growing weary of this, Paul commanded the evil spirit to coma out of her, which it did This angered the men who profited by her power, and the men took Paul and Silas to the magistrate, saying they were teaching customs not lawful. The multitude becoming enraged, too, the magistrate ordered the | Based on cooyrishted outlines produced alone to Corinth, finding: there a man named Aquila and hia wife, Pnscilla, Jewish tent makera from Rome, and aa he also was a maker of tents, he abode with them, teaching- in the synagogue every Sabbath. When Silas and Timothy joined him Paul was forbidden to teach in the synagogue, which provoked him. and he said he would preach to the Gentiles instead of the Jews. He then went to the house of Justus, "one that worshipped God, whose house joined hard to the synagogue." Then Crispus, chief ruler of the synagogue, "believed on the Lord with all his house; and many of the Corinthians hearing believed, and were baptised." In spite of opposition in Cor inth, Paul must have been en couraged by this, and was heart ened by a vision of the Lord, who said: "Be not afraid, but speak, and hold not thy peace: For I am with thee, and no man shall set on thee to hurt thee; for I have much people in this city." Many modern missionaries? of whom you may know some? are like Paul?insistent upon spreading the gospel in faraway lands; eager to go back even when they know danger may await them. by the Division n# r*hri?tU? Mueul Council rf.agg&L'lftfl* *?. U *jl. *?? <** kjr iwmww. | ? n |'|?P -*A?W| ? ?? . ? ?n-r wl4 ?. THE WORLD AHEAD jjl^ Congratulations to all young people who are graduat ing this year! Receiving a diploma means you have ful filled the academic requirements and met the standards of rJt^, conduct of your schools. They, in turn, have given you a \jj secure world for four yearS, with work and rules of con -yrr- duct mapned out for you. Now all this is changed in a day. The anchor has sud * denly pulled up, and the world ahead looks insecure and , ' f 5 uncertain. You now have to plan your own work, and set your own standards of behavior. M-K At this point, a church connection is a strong anchor to spiritual security. Let your Commencement mean a commencement of regular church attendance in the V \ church you choose. Face the new world ahead armed with dBf/A its firm hope and faith. THE CHURCH FOR ALL... ALL FOR THE CHURCH H The Church is th. greatest factor on earth for [j the building ol character and good citizenship. It is a storehouse of spiritual values. Without a \ I strong Church, neither democracy nor civilization 1 can survive There are lour sound reasons why t every person should attend services regularly t and support the Church. They are (1) For his own sake (2) For his children's sake (3) For the I sake of his community and nation. * (4) For the 1 sake of the Church itself, which needs his moral j and material support Plan to go to church regu larly and read your Bible daily. ^ Day Book Chapter Varies "*"*** Sunday Exodus 20 1-17 ' / Monday .. Joshua 1 1-t, If / Tuesday . Psalms 06 1-13 Wednesday Matthew 10 16*11 Thursday Matthew 16 12-42 , / Friday ............. Luke 10 1-11 ' />/ Saturday Luke 10 25-49 Jj * JBgggs* Allison Construction Co., Inc. ? Asphalt Farias ? Balsam Bd. Dial GL ?-M21 Allison & Duncan Oil Co. Distributee* of Phillip* M Dial GL MN1 Haselwood The Book Store and Haywood Typewriter Co. Dial GL <-8?l or GL ?-6?3? Central Cleaners Authorised Afents for Cravenette Water Kepellent Church * Montgomery sts, Dial GL ?-M71 Charlie's Drire-In Owners - OvteWNtol Complete tt-Hawsinh* } ? Enloe & Reed, Distributors ? Gulf Oil Product* Lake Junaluaka. N. C. Dial GL 8-SM9 Farmers Exchange "Dealers la Quality Seeds" Feam ? Fertiliser* . Iaaeettddeu AsheriUe Ed. Dial PL MM I Farmers Hardware and Supply Co. "Quality and Service At Seasonable Prices" Depot Street Dial GL 6-8169 Firestone Home & Auto Supply Store BlU Cobb Dial GL 6-1671 m Kurt Gans 1IVIL1I "Something from the Jeweler's Is Always Something Special" Garrett Furniture Co., Inc. Dial GL 6-1325 ? Haywood Builders Supply Co, "Wbers There Is A Material Difference" Depot Street Dial GL 6-6651 Haywood County Farmers Cooperative ? Feeds, Seeds, Fertiliser ? 216 Depot Street Dial GL 6-8621 Haywood Electric Membership Corporation Aaheville Boad GL 6-8666 Haywood Esso Distributor, Inc. ? Hrating Oils ? Day Phone GL <-5956 Night Phone GL 6-827J Haywood Tractor & Implement Company "Your Ferguson Tractor Dealer" Lake Junaluska, N. C. Dial GL 6-5?33 Junaluska Wayside Restaurant Mr. & Mrs. David Riley, Owners Open ? 6:00 A. M. to 10:30 P. M. . Dial GL 6-6285 R. R. Kibbe, Jr., Consignee Texas Petroleum Products Furnace Oil, Crystalite, Gasoline, Motor Oils Railroad St. Dial GL 6-8591 Massie Furniture Company Main Street Wayneaville T. S. Morrison - Foard, Inc. Farm Equipment, Hardware, Seeds & Feeds 405 Depot St. Dial GL 6-8386 Red Wing Gift Shop Gift and Decora tire Accessories Costume Jewelry - Greeting Cards 202 N. Main St f < *?' "ttffr'WNK T*'-'' ' ,J( "? '?"' T. - ? i Rogers Electric Company Sales and Service of All Eleetrteal AnBmhn 4S7 Kali St Mai GL MM / Smoky Mtn. Self-Service Grocery Free Delivery Balsam Bead Dial GL MH1 Turner's Store "Never Bey Before Tea Try TsismV ? WsynesviOe Ante Parts Wholesalers of Standard Parts * Aeeeaaertss 126 Main Street Dial GL MM Waynesville Motor Sales, Inc. Sales ? MERCl'KY ? Service 126 Main Street Dial GL MfN The cT WsynesviDe Mountaineer A Ceaaplete Newspaper WsynesviDe Radio Service Wayneavllle's Leadinc Sadie and TT Borrtso 116 Miller Street Dial GL f-M31 ?
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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May 31, 1956, edition 1
17
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