THE CAROLINA INDIAN VOICE! CLASSIFIED AD RATES $2.00 FIRST 25 WORDS I0<f FOR EACH ADDITIONAL WORD 521-2826 HOUSE FOE SALE 3 bedroom, 1 1/2 bath*, carpet, electric heat, doable carport. Call 521-6691 after 6 pm. |/lg HELP WANTED Addressers Wanted tant dlately! Work at home?no experience necessary -excel lent pay. Write American Service. 8350 Park Lane. Suite 127. Dallas. TX 75231 1/18 POSlTlOri AVAILABLE The Housing Authority of the City of Lumber-ton is accepting applications for the position of Executive Director to adminis ter its public housing program in the City of Lumberton and gobsaon County. The author ity currently administers 867 units of conventional km ? income public housing through out the City of Lumberton. and 202 units of Assisted Housing under the Section 8 Existing Housing Program. Candidate matt have demon strated management and ad ministrative abilities; should have sufficient cspabilities for and abMltj to carry out these itgniartoni as well as the authority's policies. Candidate must have capability of coor dhuttag activities at the Man g i ill and apsratiea Isvai md recipients of housing aaais Send resume iu complete The Housing Authority WWV Equal Opportunity Employ ar Applications will be accept ed through January 19, 1979. Ill BABY aim AVAILABLE 1 will do babysitting in my home. Call Mrs. Bluebell Lancaster at 521-3677. Bass until 1-25 HELP WANTED Homemakers needed in this area to lace leather goods at home. Earn SI50.00 per week. No experience necessary. Send SI.00 (refundable) and long stamped envelope to: Davis Enterprises. 1100 1/2 Oak Street. Kingsport. Tennessee 37600. 1/18 E1ETBOLUX FOB SALE B(possessed Eleitroiux vaccum grid shampooer for sale. New machine guarantee. r?? dealer at 73B4IW. 3/29 HOME FOB TODAY AMftsohe-Try Country living! Custom built rustic wood the trees on I 26 acre let. Just completed, this 3 bedroom. 2 bath room. Features greet casport. spadeua porch end QuaNty Isntur i s at a pcitc"yos VM MAI DTATI CWTIB II0W Mi St I H 7N4II1 BP.ALTOB Judy Wdkarson 7382701) PW Cdtchen 73MD22 MMry BeN 7I899U Helen LacfclMr 921-0124 WANTED TO LEASE Want to leaae tobacco poundage. Will pay 45 cent* per pound. Call 628-9223 days and 628-9225 nights. UN FOE SALE Coastal Bermuda hay for sale. SI.25 a bale. Call 919 739-7946 in Lumberton. 1/tt LEAD INSTBUCTOE WANTED Lead Instructor wanted for the Associate Degree Crim inal Justice curriculum at Richmond Technical Institute. Minimum qualifications: Mas ter's Degree required, prefer rably in Criminal Justice. Degrees in law, political sci ence, sociology or other relat ed area acceptable. Baccalaure ate degrees in Sociology, Criminology. Public Admin istration, Political Science or other related area acceptable. Experience in law enforcement and or corrections preferred. Teaching experience also pre ferred.The position must be filled by February 15, 1979. Application deadline: Jan. 26, 1979. Inquires should be di rected to Dr. Ariie R. Smith, Director of Occupational Edu cation, Richmond technical Institute, P.O. Box 1189, Ham let. NC 28345. Telephone (919) S82-1980. An Affirmative Ac Ban/ Eqnal Opportunity Ens ploy nr. 7 1-18 POSITION AVAILABLE Day Car* Dtrsctari Responsi ble to the.Executive Director. The Day Care Director will be responsible for the ove,m" J efficient operation of his/ her center and act as liaison lufi?n oftdtrtl office* and ? i ?" *" center staff Dal* Dados i Maintenance of school food services program. Responsible for the supervi sion and functioning of aO center personnel. Responsible for daily administrative needs of the center. Responsible for all programatic phases of the center's activities. Psrtsdlr Deftest Responsible for parent conferences. Re sponsible for attending staff ?ortings. Initiating and hold ing center staff meetings, as well as parent meetings and local center board meetings. Responsible for reports, main taining accurate records on all enrol lees, and maintaining accurate records on staff at tendance. Responsible for in take of fees, and all expendi tures of the center and main tenance of accurate fiscal records. Responsible for all purchases made on the center level. Occasional Patios i Responsi ble for dissemination of infor mation to the parents. Re sponsible for arbitrating differences between center personnel. Responsible for overall planning and super vision of field trips. Responsi ble to secure transport in case of emergencies. Responsible to trouble shoot in any position in the oenter in case of need. Sftdal Mm m Assigned. BihilsasMpsi All children enrolled in center. Applicants and families receiving services through his/ her center. Day care services components, boards, outside agencies and . civic groups, professional groups, general public. MWuau QuaMkatfaaai Must love children and be able to relate to them. Must be able to relate to adults on levels of the socio-economic structure of the community Must be in esceUent health. Must be agile enough to perform her/his job aa a teacher of small children. Must be wiling to continually leer seas her/his knowledge in her/his field of endeavor Meet ho able to drive and have car available Bachelor's De Cln ChBd Development or jr Childhood, or Soeial Wort or related fields with a IT, at the diacreiien'of the In to applies! toe Apptieatiees may in made at: Pembroke Housing Authority Central Office, Lucklear Court. 60h May nor Street. Pembroke. NT 28J72. Contact IVrmrn: Clin ton L. Thomas. Jr.. Executive Director. DeadHhe for applications: January 31, 1979. POSITION AVAILABLE The City of Lumberton is now taking applications for the position of Communication* Dispatcher I to perform re sponsible and skilled dis patching work in the Munici pal Communications Center. Work involves operating a telephone, two-way radio and other communications equip ment in answering requests for fire, police, public works, rescue or related assistance. Must be able to work rotating shifts. list of requirements include experience in clerical or relat ed work. Graduation from high school, or an equivalent com bination of experience and training. Applyt City of Lumberton, Personnel Department, 501 East 5th Street, Lumberton, NC 28358 An equal opportun ity employer. SUB-RURAL CARRIER OF RECORD The United States Postal Service announces an examin ation for Sub-Rural Carrier of Record positions in the Post Office at Pembroke, N.C. 28372. Applications are now being accepted, and examina tions will be given to establish a register of eligible* from which future Sub-Rural Car rier vacancies will be filled. All interested persons are urged, to apply. Announcement out lining requirements is posted t/St the Pembroke Post Office. Applications must be submit ted Before March 10, 1979. Equal Opportunity Employer. 1-18 ' ^ ? Reflections . by Alro N Oxendine MAfTT MKTHDAY TO MY FATHER This Friday is my father s SIst birthday. He has seen a lot of changes since his birth in the winter of 1898- in the very same log house where he and mother live. Daddy like* to sit in his warming-up chair nest to the wood and coal burning cook stove. One day while I was home during my recent visit. Daddy pointed to that corner of the room. "This is the^very spot where 1 was born." he told me. "This was the bedroom back then." Daddy made it to 80 last January without giving up many of his activities. He had gotten plenty of esercise as a mechanic and later, an electri cian. His heart attack in 1973 occurred while he was wiring a three-story house. Sometime last year he decided it might not be too wise to keep climbing poles the way he d done for years. He started slowing down a little. Then in October he had a light stroke, he still has perfect speech. And he can recite poem after poem that he learned in the one-room school he walked to as a boy. he also enjoys playing hymns on his harmonica. But his vision has somehow been affected. And he gets mixed up when he tries to do certain things with his hands, such as tying his shoes. I had -.i-ver thought about what a devastating experience it would be to suddenly lose an ability you've taken for grant ed all your life. Not being able to drive the new car has hurt him more than almost anything else. With the progress he has already made, he hopes to do many more things, including driving, again in the future. Happy birthday. Daddy! THAWING OUT MY PARENTS I had to laugh out loud when I read what I'd written about "thawing-out my parents." To think I was planning to be an English teacher! Well, students can learn a lot by reading my column- about what not to do! This is a perfect erxample of how important one word in this case "pipes"- can be. Or even one little punctuation mark- in this cart an apoMio phe. ? ? Anyhow. I do hope that my parent* and their drain pipe* are thawed ant by now. "The pipes just about all thaw ed," Mother told me when | called an 1 Sunday. "Bnt.not quite." Aim she said tht the ground was covered with more snow than I *<kw the whole time I was then. The wind had blown the snow into two- foot drifts here and there around tlie yard. Just like the "good old days" whunj was growing up in Montana. FELLOWSHIP AND UNDERSTANDING the other day after a short shopping "spree," three of ?our ladies climbed back on the van, laughing and joking with each other. Only after they commented on the fun they had while they were waiting for us at the dime store did I realize that each of the ladies represented a different racial segment of Robeson County. It always does my heart good when I see local people especially the older generation reaching across the artificial barriers into an area of fellow ship and understanding. PILOT AND FLIGHT ATTENDANT I took the plane on my recent trip to Montana and back. In fhct, I had to board three Piedmont planes be tween Fayetteville and Den ver. At Denver I took a Western Airlines plane to Butte. Montana. Twelve days later - I again boarded a Western Airlines plane at Butte, bound for Denver. From Denver I stayed on the same Piedmont plane all the way to Washington, where I took a second Piedmont plane back to Fayetteville. On all these flights, I had a chance to observe a number of ?crews in action. Back on the van, it suddenly occurred to me what Mr. Herman and I do all day. A van may be less exciting than an airplane. But the job of the crew is much the same. Mr. Herman is the pRst ? I am the gi^jrt attendant Last week Robert Moody, who usually works on the county van, piloted the city van all around town and into the outskirts of Lumberton. He was a very good pilot! But we were glad to have our regular pilot back after his well deserved vacation. Beta Club Members Installed at Magnolia High School Tfca Mif.l. Chapter af the Nalieaal B?U CM> receatfy btdarted tU m BMtebera. la live iwUfluM BMffcteg the 4M ??Iihiit ef Km Na UmmI Bete CMb <m prnn ted to tiic pried pal. Jofcn Mari Bwib. The Beta CM> h ? selective (rasp ef yeaag peo ple wke ere slilitof for Ugh goals to eerick ear I?ewe?i. levelled were, Ml to rtcbti Jefforr Wjm, Dm; Uwwy, Jackie McGIrt, Amm LnUmt, Catfcy McGkrt, Ketfcryn Break* Deri* Bel, Khaberiy Wyn, ThnoAy Mergaa Mi TomaMu BUak*. ICharUe Lewry photo | m ? -fflSf ? INI CAAOUNA I ? MD4AM VOKX I 521-2626 ^ m ? Aitoi? I I TNI CAAOUNA I Imdmmvokx I GOLDEN TORNADOES EDGE WARRIORS by David Malcolm Fairmont- Dwain McDougald poured in a game high 23 points for Pembroke's Warri ors but they still fell short, dropping a 57-55 squeaker to Fairmont's Golden Tornadoes here Tuesday night in 3 Rivers Conference action. The Tornadoes undefeated in conference play, fell behind to the visiting Pembroke squad 6-0 at the onset of the contest but came back to tie on the strength of three straight baskets. Both teams picked up steam in the second quarter, Fair mont pulling slightly ahead in the evenly played contest at the half 31-29. The home team Golden Tornadoes began to pull away from the Warriors in the third quarter on the strength of Fay Baker's jump shot from the top of the key and led as much as 12 points in the waning seconds of the period. A basket by Telford Locklear cut Pembroke's deficit to 10 with two seconds on the clock. The Warriors surged in the early moments of the final period and drew to within two at 55-53 with 2:28 left on a field goal by Telford Locklear. Pembroke had the chance to knot the score at the 1:45 mark but missed on both ends of a two shot foul. McDougald missed on a lay up attempt with :55 left in the game and Fairmont took possession of the ball. Pembroke got an apparent steal with ten seconds to go and James Davis raced with what would have been the tying basket but the Warriors' McDougald was whistled for a questionable foul and the Golden Tornadoes converted on both free throws to up their lead to 4 at 57-53. Dwylan Locklear scored on a field goal attempt with :02 left but it was too little too late as the Warriors fell to the Tornadoes 5 Fay Baker led the victors with 19 points while brother Jerry and teammate Reginald Gerald added 11 each. Telford Lock]ear joined McDougald in double figures for the Warri ors with 14 points. Fairmont ups Its league leading record to 3-0, 7-5 overall while Pembroke falls below the 500 mark, going to 1-2 conference, 6-7 overall. Pembroke: 14-15-10-16- 55 Fairmont- 14-17-18-8- 57 Halftime (F) 31-29 Pembroke (55) Joseph Roberts 6, Dwylan Locklear-6, Telford Locklear-14, Dwain McDoug ald-23, Jackie Lucas- 5, James Davis, Ricky Sanders, Randall Cummings. Howard Jacobs-1 Fairmont (57): Fay Baker- 19. Jerry Baker-U, Reginald Ger ald-11, Greg Coleman- 6, Edward Smith-6, Angelo McMillan, Andrea Taylor, Ro bert Smith, Richard Atkinson 4, Dennis Dison, Michael Walters, Morris White, Mi chael Williams. L. Ford led a trio of junior Tornadoes in double figures, tallying 18 in a narrow 67- 63 win. Darrel Godfrey was high for Pembroke with 21. Pembroke:: 14-16-13- 20- 63 Falrmont-18-17-17-15- 67 Halftime (F) 35-30 Pembroke (63): Donnie Carter 6, Darrel Godfrey- 21, Brent Swett, Ronnie Sampson- 8, Richard Tuck- 2, Perry Strick land-! 1. Reggie Didier, Ron nie Carter- 2. Teko Emanuel, Roscoe Charles, Harvey Sam pson, Sterling Watson, Ronnie Bell, Reggie Tuck. Robbie Brayboy. Dwayne Locklear, Mickey Carter. Fairmont (67): L. Ford 18, A. McCormick-10. M. Gerald- 7, V. Annette- 11. T. Hunt- 7, R. Southern-6, V. Travis- 2, S. Freeman, F. Williams- 6, T. Evans, T. Buie, D. McDowell, M. Hunt, E. McCullough, J. DIAL INSURANCE AGENCY (CfD) PEMBROKE ^^^-7 ?All Kinds of Insurance ?Financing Is Available Across from Pembroke FCX ?Now Featuring insurance Coverage For The MOBILE HOME DWELLER! Dale Brooks with ST. PAULS | CALLING i 1 I RICK BROOKS WITH THE TOP 40 ' > "WLAB RADIO - 1060-ST. PAULS" ?Rock & Disco From 3 until 7 TWO MINUTES' HHH THE BIBLE W ?T COIMIllUt I. IMM Ml*. ^9 Mil AH Mil tOOITT /T CMICAOO. liimotl Mill / ^ LIVING TO THE GLORY OF GOD "WHETHER THEREFORE YE EAT, OR DRINK, OR WHATSO EVER YE DO, DO ALL TO THE GLORY OF GOD" (I Cor. 1031). This is the great guiding princi ple of the Christian life. The Apostle Paul points out in the preceding context that what may be perfectly right for one per son to do may trouble another's conscience. The sincere and gra cious believer, therefore, will not carelessly violate his brother's con scientious scruples, offending him by indulging in that which he con siders wrong. In Paul's day, this particularly involved the foods of which men partook, but from both Romans 14 and I Corinthians 10, it is evident that Christian conduct in general is involved. If, in my daily conduct, I con sider not only my own, but also my brother's conscience, it does not follow from this that I am dis obeying Gal. 5:1 by failing to "stand fast in the liberty where with Christ hath made us free." True, I have no right to give up my blood-bought liberty, but I do have liberty to give up my rights. This the world about us is slow to do, but it is one of the signs of true re generation. My d'm in life should not he to gratify my own desires, much less to show up my brother's weak nesses by vaunting my liberty in Christ. My one aim should rather be to glorify God in all I say and do. All this, of course, has to do only with the conduct of believers in Christ. The unbeliever can do nothing "to the glory of God." His very rejection of Christ is a continual offense to God who, in love, gave His Son to die in our place. The only way in which the unbeliever can honor God is to turn from his unbelief and trust Christ as Savior and Lord. Attend the Church of your choice this Sunday. JtfafeS| Mr,I IT TAKES A KEY ACCOUNT! ^ The Key Account A way of maintaining your money in savings mote ad of in your checking account. You can now keep all your money in your savingi and still use your checking as always When a check is written, we simply transfer from your savings account to checking the etact amount of money you need to pay your chuck You may now earn S9> interest on your money and utilize your chucking as you have previously A way of making money work for you until it's needed in your chucking account. Maintain a balance of 12.000 or mm* in your savings, and this surviae is free Of course then? are service charges for accounts under 12.000. so this may mm he fore everyone f 'ome by die hank, and let us esptam this new program to you B lumbee bank PEMBROKE, N. C 28372 BEGINNING Wedneaday, January 24. IV79, tha Main Office and lobby of the LUMBEE BANK will be cloaad on Wadnaaday afternoons. But. for the convenience of our cuatomera, our Drive-In Window will continue to be open.

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