FEBRUARY 20, 1936 ss88?" improved '* -- J UNIFORM INTERNATIONAL SUNDAY| CHOOL L? SSOn REV. P. IT F1TZWATK.R. D. IK Member of Faculty. Moody Bible Institute of Chicago. ? Wostern Newspaper Union. Lesson for February 23 PEOPLE BEFORE PROPERTY LESSON TF.XT-L.uko 8:26-37. COLDEX TEXT ? No servant can serve two masters; for cither ho will liMa the or.e, and love the other; or f.]vo he will hold to one, and despise the other Ye cannot serve God and S mammon:?Luke 16:13. PRIMARY TOPIC?Josus With His Friends in a Storin. JUNIOR TOPIC ? Jesus With His Friends In a Storm. intermediate and senior TOPIC?Sympathy or Selfishness? YOUNG PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPIC?Human Welfare Before Financial Profit. After his teaching by the parable ot the soil and the lighted candle, .Testis exhibited his credentials, enforcing his teaching by demonstrations of his mighty power. I. Jesus Calming the Storm (vv. 2223). Iu fids miracle he demonstrated his power over nature. 1. Jesus asleep (v. 23). While the disciples were sailing the ship tlie Master fell asleep. 2. The frightened disciples (vv. 23. 21). The storm seems to have been an unusuul one. These sturdy men were used to storms, hut as their ship was being filled witli water tbey awoke Jesus with their cry of fear, 3. Jesus rebuked the wind and water (v. 24). At his word there was a great calm. We can with confldeucc put our trust in Jesus Christ. 4. Jesus rehuked the disciples (v. 2d). After rebuking the raging ele- j* uients, he turned to the disciples. Ue | did not rebuke tltem for waking hliu, j hut for their lack of faith. II. Jtsua Casting Out Demons (vv. 20-30). I In this mighty act Jesus* power over demons was demonstrated. Demon *possession was in that day, and it is today, an awful reality. The eharnct eristics are often similar to cases of insanity and many are called insane, who are really demon-possessed. ^ 1. Jesus met by the demoniac (vv. 0 20-23). This poor man's suffering was e, dreadful. lie abode in the tombs without clothing. At the sight of Jesus jj he made an outcry anil foil down be- ^ tore him and besought him not to torment hliu. There Is no doubt in I lie e mind of demons as to the reality of a place of torment. : 2. Jesus' question (v. 30). lie asked 1 bins, "What is thy name?" Ills pur- | n pose was to bring the real man to j consciousness, to enable blni to dis- j a> tlnguisli between himself and the do- i o mon who lick! him. The answer shows w lhat the man thought his ease was ? hopeless. He said, "Lesion," which meant lhat many demons had entered j, into him. n 3. The demons' request (vv. 31, 32). g They naked permission to enter into w r u herd of swine. n 4. Thetr request granted (vv. 32. 33). Just why this was done we do not know. Since Jesus did it, we must heliere that It was right and wise. t 5. The effect upon the people (vv. 34 87). a. Tin- keepers of the swine went I and made It known In the city and country. h. The people ninde Investigation. They saw the man sitting at the feet 1 ot Jeans, clothed and in his right mind, v and heard the testimony of those who I had seen what was done. e c. The multitude besought Jesns to l depart from them. How sad It Is thnt in the face of the mighty works of o Jesus meu will not open their hearts t] to him. a 6. Tiie request of the healed man c (vv. 38, 3d). Ue di sired to be with tl Jesus. This was natural and right, c but his responsibiliiy was to go home aimw u; Lui* pccpit* mere wuui great things God had done for him. III. Jesus' Power Over Disease (vv. 13-18). Jesus heals a woman with an Issue of hlood. Observe: 1. Her helpless condition (v. 43). She hud been a great sufferer for twelve long years (Mark 5:20). 2. Her faith (v. 44). nor faith was demonstrated by pressing her way through the thronging multitude. 3. Her confession (v. 47). She thought furtively to get the blessing, but Jesus had her make a public confession. 4. Christ's words of encouragement (v. 48). He told her that It was her faith, not her touch, that saved her. and bade her go in peace. IV. Jeauc Raises the Dead (vv. 1042; 50-50). 1. Jolrus' request (vv. 40-42). His "ru REA0Y( TUC. TEA LEAVESI ME. YOUR BATH, r IF I WERE Y( nuuat OF HAZARDS By jf#^ a o o Jo v a Mac Arthur i i 31 ? ? o o r?|" O o" IT UjQ t>_ O Appalachian - -II | card, at. 7 o'clock the girls' basket1 ball team will meet the Eastern , Carolina Teachers College team and at 8 o'clock five boxing bouts have been scheduled. Wilson, star of last week's show at the gym, will appear again. Last week, Appalachian's boxing team put on the first meet held here in several years, which met with unusual success. The boys were quite at home in the new ring which has been provided for quick installation on the gym I floor. Obituary Mrs. Carolina Tugman Walters diei at her home in Blowing Rock Jar 29th. She had been in declining healtl for tiie past ten months, but he death came as a shock, having bcci confined to her bed only one week. She was one of Watauga's oldcs citzens. well known throughout tli county, having made hor home in va rious sections. Bora and reared in the Meat Cam; section where she lived until tliedeatl of her husuand, Benjamin Tugrnan ii 1900. There she took an active par in the affairs of her community an< church. Hopcweli, where at her re quest, her bodv was laid to rest Ti 1900 she moved to Todd, from then to Blowing Rock, where she lived fo years working hard for her churcl and through her efforts the first or gan was procured. Here as elsewhere she made man friends and later came back to spen with them her last days. Seven year she spent at Tocoe, enjoying th quiet and restful community and oft en remarked of her good friend there. At the age of 77 she crossed th continent and spent the winter wit] her daughter, Mrs. E. C. Moody, wh lives in Washington. Having enjoye her trip to the utmost she never tire of telling about crossing the Rockie and many interesting things tha would have been overlooked by young person. The last five years o her life were spent here, devoting he time to the piecing of quilts an knitting. Her last work which we nevcv nnmnlntorl <> ..Y.vwvu, n oo a aillLLV;U aprucl of unusual beauty, being knitted o two very small steel needles. She oft en complained of -the younger genei ation for not learning handwork a the girls in the past. She had an active mind and ws very entertainng, often telling he experience during the Civil War c her father's riding away on their fir est black horse, saying he would r< turn in a few weeks which turned ou to be years, having been kept prison er in Camp Chase, Ohio, where h nursed the Northern soldiers wit] smallpox, and contracting the diseas from which he almost died; and o his homecoming when the war endec Mrs. Walters was a person of un usual character, always looking o the bright side and enjoying life t its fullest. She spoke of death as on going on a trip would say, most o my old friends have gone on and will soon follow. She is survived by two daughter and one son, 14 grandchildren, 2 great grandchildren and 1 great grea granacmid. Also two sisters am many friends to mourn her departure A FRIEND. St rip-cropping*' successfully con trolled erosion on demonstrated farms in Yancey county last year de spite heavy rains in the spring, re ports the farm agent. ==31 ~i W just because the te happen to form a cer she's able to re(t> my 11L1 Farm Income Drops In State In 1935 Washington, D. C., Feb. 14.?North Carolina is among the eight states showing a decrease i:i farm income ill 1935, according to the report of the Bureau of Agricultural Economics. For the whole nation there a 12 per cent, increase in farm income. Total recepits from sales of principal farm products and from rental and benefit payments were $6,832,- j 932,000 in 1936. compared with $6,-| 102,901,000 in 1934, with $4,871,606,000 in 1933, and $4,235,362,000 in 1932. Smallest improvement in income was in the South Atlantic region. The only states showing reduced income in 1935 were Maine, Nebraska, North Carolina. South Carolina. Florida, Alabama, and New Mexico. Increased farm income last year was due primarily to a 20 ptr cent, rise in the general level of farm j prices, says the report. Crop price I; gains were relatively small, 'but 11 prices for livestock and livestock pro! ducts advanced considerably, causing i a marked variation in the different j regions in the extent of the improvement in farm income over 1934."' j Marked increases in cash receipts j in Indiana and neighboring states J and in most of the mountain states 1 and Oklahoma resulted principally j from increased income from livestock. In Kentucky and Louisiana, larger rental and benefit payments, together with increased income from livestock, were mainly responsible for the larger income. On the other hand, most of the declines in income were due to reducd income from crops. In Maine, smaller incomes from potatoes, due to lower price during most of the year, was the chief factor in decline in receipts. In Nebraska the principal reduction was in in-1 " come from corn, and in North Caro-1 Una, South Carolina and Alabama, j ^ | the lower price of cotton for the 1935 1 x j crop was reflected in moderate lossa j es. The slight decline in income in r | Florida wa3 due primarily to reduced -j i income from citrus fruits. t Income Southern Forests Increases Southern National Forests brought. | ' in more revenue from the sale of tim- j ? j her during the last six months of j I ' 1935 than any othor Federal Forest 1 II Service Region In the United States j t except one in the Northwest timber j '; belt. According to Joseph C. Kirc'ner, j ~ ; Southern Regional Forester, income 11 from timber sales for that period j e amounted to $197,000. This was an r increase of $33,000 over a similar, 1 Deriod the vear ~ I Kircher stated that increased ac- j tivily in the lumber market was re- ; y sponsible for this upturn. He ex-1 11 plained that the United States For-' 3 est Service makes no effort to stini- 1 e ulate timber sales but waits for ap- j " plications from lumbermen to lake i 3 timber out for market. When such | applications arc received, forest of-! c ficcrs determine units and stands : h that should bo cut out. and mark the j ? individual trees that are ready for j market. Tlic timber is then taken out j d by private lumbermen under Federal j 3 supervision. MtUSSSBBm BPS EVFJtY property owner should j_ safeguard his Investment with sufficient Insurance. Don't put e off buying this protection . . . k unless you want to gamble with e all the cards stacked aghast you! I It is important too that all your j insurance policies be correctly w written in a dependable old cornn pany, like the Hartford Fire In0 surance Company we represent. ? Watauga Insurance Co. 1 agent for HARTFORD FIRE INSURANCE CO. 3 Boone, North Carolina 8 - ? : ppp SALVE i ODD COLDS I Jqulil - Tablets - Salve price Nose Drops 5c, 10c, 25c PAGE SEVEN LEGA^NOTICES AJver'.ifenenls appearing under ' M * classification arc payable in adc-ance. This rule is enforced impartially. Please do not expect the publishers to deviate. ENTRY NOTICE NO. 2390 State of North Carolina, Watauga County. Office of Entry Taker for said County. W. W. Holman locates and enters 25 ' twenty-five) acres of land in said county on the waters of Elk Creek in Bald Mountain Township. Beginning on a chestnut oak, corner of the old Blackburn land, deeded to Elizabeth and Martha Graham, then 40 poles south, then west course with said tract, then north to the old Steel line back to the beginning for complement.. Entered January S. 1930. MRS. H. JOE HARDIN, l-19-4p. Entry Taker. NOTICE Under and by virtue cf an order of the Superior Court of Watauga county made in a civil action entitled It. B. Hardin and W. D. Favthing, Administrators of the estate of Mrs. Suma Hardin vs. Lut.her Hardy and wife. Mrs. Luther Hardy, the undersigned commissioner will on the 5th day of March. 1936 at 12 o'clock noon at the courthouse door in Boone, sen to tne nignost bidder for cash that certain tract of land in Boone Township, Watauga county, North Carolina, and more particularly described as follows: BEING 10 acres more or less bounded on the North by tile lands of Walter Culler and others as described in a deed recorded in the Watauga County Registry in Book 30 at page 630. This the 3rd day of February, 1936. WADE E. BROWN, 2-6-lc Commissioner NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL ESTATE State of North Carolina, County of Watauga. Under and by virtue of the power and authority contained ir. that certain deed of trust executed by James A Miller and wife Sarah Miller, to "Die Raleigh Savings Bank and Tuist Company, trustee, which said deed of trust is dated April 13. 1925, and recorded in Book 4, Page 350, of the Watauga County Registry, default having been made in the payment of the indebtedness thereby secured and in the conditions therein secured the undersigned substituted trustee by instrument recorded in Book 44, Page 220. Watauga county Registry, will on Monday, March 2, 1930. at or about twelve o'clock Noon, at the courthouse door at Boom North Carolina. offer for sale and sell to the highest bidder for cash the following described property: All those two certain pieces, parcels or tracts cf land containing one hundred and forty two (142) acres and twenty four (24) mads, more or loss, situate, lying and being on the. Meadow Creek Road about fourteen miles Northeast from the town of Boone, in Stony Fork Township, County of Watauga. State of North Carolina, and described as fellows: Tract Or.e: Being bounded on the North by the lands of R. T. Greer: on the East by the lands of S. W. Greer and Tom Miller: on the South by the lands of Tom Jackson; cm the West by the lands of R. T. Greer and the Carroll lands, and having such shape, metes, courses and distances as will more fully appear by reference to a plat thereof made by L> W. Lloyd, Surveyor. November 1(3, 1922, which plat is on file with the Atlantic .Joint Stock Land Bard-: of Raleigh, and containing ninety-five (90) acres, more or less. Tract Two: Being bounded on the North by the lands of A. S. Cooper; on the East by the lands of I. F. Church: on the South by the lands ot E. W. Miller and E, O. Greer; on the West by the lands of E. O. Greer, and having such shape, metes, courses, and distances as will more fully appear by reference to a plat thereof made by D. R. Scott, Surveyor, August 29, 1924, which said plat is on file with the Atlantic Joint Stock uniiii oanii or itaieigh, and containing forty-seven (47) acres, and twenty-four (24) rods, more or less. The above land was conveyed to James A. Miller by three cnveyances: One from John Miller and recorded in public registry of Watauga county, in Book 29, page 120; and deed from John Miller to James A. Miller, recorded in aforesaid registry in book 29, page 123; and deed from E. W. Miller and wife Bertie Miller to James A. Miller, recorded in aforesaid registry in book 31, page 473. All these deeds are made a part of this description. Terms of sale cash and trustee will require deposit of 10% of the amount of the bid as evidence of good faith. This the 31st day of January, 1936. H E. STACY. Substituted Trustee Robert Weinstein, Attorney, Raleigh, N. C. 2-6-4e SHEBEUEVES tiW. THAT SORT OF THING TOO^-^^TTtRLYREOICUlOOS* ^ > ' ^#b* --