i H. Y. Belle 1 111 bANO HIS NEWS OF NEBO VALLEY I declare unto you ladies, gentle men, too, If this heat-up wave keeps on burning down 1 can't make my get ground. Mfr. and Mrs. Norman .Owens visl ? ted Mr., William Ware aver the week end from near Shady Rest. Well, what 1 saw up street con- ' vlnces me that there is such a thing as perpetu.al love. Mr. John West | with a pretty young blond head, headed for the 10 cent store to stock up on some nice jewelry for this lady love. John sure is going to hook up with the right gal thl? time. Go to it John. 1 called up to see the Mr. Gaults. They always take time off to enter tain the news reporter. They have a nice store well stocked with every thing good to eat. They are my, very j dear friends. Horace Hord has plenty good! things and can make you glad you bought so much so cheap and good, j 'A man down in New Mexico who hadn't kissed his wife she claimed j In 50 years, shot the man that did. ,lf anything costs you more than you are getting out ot It today, it is probably Socialism. A Woman with temptation spurns It. A man takes off from in the cheer j ful hope it will overtake him soon, j 'Uncle Hiram, says he iS old e-j nough to femember back when bath j ing suits covered a multitude of shapely legs. The man who brags ? I boss and ' run. my home, usually cuts the stove wodd, rocks the cradle and pushes the 'baby carriage, while the mother entertains at the Wo mans Club. Oh, Daddy! Come on in Harry, and tell us something. Your rival Joe has 6 million slaves under arms. Now, Harry, you tell one. Maybe we misunderstand Stalin Joe. He may be a tender hearted lit tle guy. We didn't understand, or like 'Hitler ? hell on four wheels rar , ing to roll. We are now walk ing into the blood iest war since God [ Created man. Be for '55 we will be in [ war up to the bri dle mit. The signs of the times surely Indicate that we are Just on the threshhold of a greater war than the children of men have ever yet known. Riot and ruin staring * the world in the face. Russia with six million soldiers ready under arm*, ?Pi FACTS ABOUT BEER { It Happened in '76 | ? tn 1876 I ou is 'Pasteur, one of j F'rance's greatest scientists, pul> ; tailed fill "Studies on Boer," the . *oault of five years' research in i English and Continental brew eries. i Past?ur's research proved that fermentation is produced only by " yeast; that biological changoe are * due to micro-organisms. For prac j tical brewing he patented a meth ; od for controlling fermentation, ' and brewing advanced from a hit-or-miss practico to an exact ing science. The French scientist's discov- . eriett meant more to mankind than merely standardizing or improv ing tho quality of a favorite bev erage. For he wrote in his book, "When we see beer and wine sub jected to doep alterations because they have given refuge to micro- _ organisms invisibly introduced . . . it is impossible not to pursue the thought that similar facts may, mu)*t, take place in animals and in man." Out of the knowledge he gained from studies in fermentation came pasteurization and new under- ' standings in rpedicine and surgery which have saved countless lives. ? I Thus brewing played a signifi ' cant . lie in science. Today, in' turn, science plays an essential I role in brewing. UNITED STATES BREWERS : FOUNDATION INSURANCE Bt JXL, RALK1CH, N. C. < ; death, hell and destruction on ev ery hand. Let a wish our government would tend to their own business and stay ou of other nation's business. Come to think about it, why not do both. (The grouchy Democrats are always ready to pick a fight and raise a i fuss. Can't tend to their own busi ness. The situation in Wa * ington is heading hellward. Like ward ducks, Just keep hoofing up for Harry and everything will come out on top of the fence. And now our national debt stands at 255 billion, and 700 million dollars which, is [52,000 for every man, woman and I child in the nation, and then say [preachers we are not headed hell ward and with the brakes off. A young man next door graduated from a Southern college and went i to the city to practice juvenile de linquency. At this writing no way given ' down to man whereby he can be' born only by being conceived by a wkoman. No name given under Heaven since the Christ was conceived by; the Virgin Mary in (he manger that night, wlien the Angels found the baby by "its 'mother's $ide in rhe lovyly manger to be saved only by the way of the Cross. 1 asked a man, did you promise to support the Constitution when you were naturalized by Uncle' Sam's agents? Who, me. said he, I've a wife, father and 4 children to support. Some men remind me of a wood - ; pecker pecking on a long leaf pine, pecking dnly with his pecker wood- ? head. His Success lies in the fact 1 that he uses his head. So many only use their hands. So different' to a wood pecker on a log. They ,don't have it in their heads. The fast those i without it in their heads must use their hands. If ail had it in their! heads no use doing it with your hands. A one armed man can do: more with one hand if his head is' sound, than two men with saw dust I in their heads and four hands. It's true all are born with a head, but' some are like a blank cartridge ? nothing in the shell. Ail men are not born equal. Some men have a better back ground than ! others. Some are born endowed with j more intelligence than others, and ' life ' is made easier for those with a I better spark of wisdom, makes it 1 more easy to cultivate human intel ligence when one becomes able to cultivate what brains that were pla ced in our heads by human intelli gence before we came on the scene of action Implanted lh.the head byj the Creator. They are so different ?to the woodpecker All he knows is to peck on a log til he pecks out the worm. Then he pecks no more with his pecker. A man with just two hands, no brains, may peck for the worm til his hands are well njgh worn out, but the worm of suc cess is never found. I know some thing, but I'm not going to tell it Bud. A Short, Short Story ? * Back in those by gone days I . loved the birds, animals, and flow ers. 1 knew their ways. The woods and lakes were the places of my childhood dreams 1 fished in sum mer with hook and line, gathered flowers and acted shepherd to our flock of growing lambs. The woods and lakes were the places >oat. Back to the quite farm home we strolled. That night I dreamed .?owing a canoe with my love 'by my side. When 1 awoke the sun was I shining through my window. Never before had any sun so brightly shown thru my window on a Sunday morning, while the church bell chimed out over -the landscape, Jesus Trover of My Soul. Love en raptured my soul.? The End. THE ETERNAL PLAN Let your prayers ascend, Where Angels press Their harps of gold, A little prayer da^' by day. Mak?s o?'r lives A part of Ood's Eternal Plan. A few more bright moments here. This life is but a span. Soon the silvery cord loosens, The golden bow' of life br^akes. Eternity's fire flash on our vision i Then dreaming, loving, dieing. But that's God's Eternal Plan." SJM Have Visited Bleeding Association When Southeastern Artificial Breeding Association ot Ashevilie began operations on 'January 1, 1948, ivery little publicity was given to the beginning of a tremendous breeding program, through artifici al, insemination, deigned to revolu tionize the dairy industry through out the southeast wirhin a few short years. However, after several weeks the general public manifested an enthuiastic interest in this program and the stud itself. Mr. Dietrick, manager of Southeastern, was soon receiving many requests from Vet eran - farmer groups, county agents, business clubs, and individuals for appointments to witness the entire operation of the stud, and an oppor- 1. tunity to lo)k over the fine Proved* Sires housed in a modern barn. | There have been as many as 200 visitors in certain groups who came j How to Build Your Dzeam Home ... (1) Save Regularly Savings accounts grow surprisingly when you save REGULARLY. We suggest our optional savings plan which pays interest at three per cent compounded semi-annually. The first thing you know, you'll have the money to pur chose your lot. or to make the down-payment on your new home. 'A (This Association also offers lump sum inves tors a savings- income plan. Full-paid stock is available from $100 to $5,000.) (2) Build With a Home Loan Build a home on a home loan repayable in con venient monthly paymsnts on our direct re duction loan plan. Every payment (often no i higher than rent) increases your equity in your home. Come in today . . . . HOME BUILDING & LOAN ASSOCIATION A. H. Patterson. Sec.-Treas. ' ? ? i from far aifd neax in private can and chartered buses. To date there have been approxi mately 5,000 persons who have vis tied the Asheville stud ? repr?s?en tatives from 35 States, DL-?riet of Columbia, Canada, China, Cuba, Italy, and Venezuela. Southeastern is proud to have been host to these visitors, and extends a cordial in- ; vitation to one and all to visit the stud, which ships semen to 49 af filiated associations in North Caro- ? lina, Virginia, ^Georgia, and Florida and to the Indiana Artificial Breed ing Association at Carmel. Cleveland Cooperative Breeding Association, Inc., is one of t*he 4ft Associations that is servicing dairy farmers in this area with .?>mca