Newspapers / The Franklin Times (Louisburg, … / Sept. 18, 1969, edition 1 / Page 5
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Community Church Notices St. Paul's Episcopal ^lfcTh Sunday after Trinity ^undiy: f9:00 A.M. Fellowship Com- 1 mu nion and Coffee Hour "^10:00 A.M. Church School tar whole family, W. J. shearin, Supt. {.1:00 A.M. Morning Prayer d Sermon Nursery provided, Mrs. Paul fnsley yte, Frank Johnson driesday: 1:45 P.M. Choir Rehearsal '^United Methodist Sunday: . 9:00 Worship: Christ and Our Humpty Dumpty Lives i 9:45 Church School 11:00 Worship: Christ and" Our Humpty Dumpty Lives u 5:00 Youth Choir Rehear \ sal Wednesday: ' 7:30 Chancel Choir Re * f hearsal Thursday: 9:00 The Twelve ? A Study of The Sermon on the Mount Louisburg Baptist Sunday: 9:45 Church School, R. S. Knott, Superintendent 9:45-12:00 Nursery for pre-school children. 11:00 The Church at Wor ship, The Rev. A, S. Tomlin son, pastor. Sermon subject, '"A Christian Vocabulary ? Grace" Wednesday: 7 :30 Choir Rehearsal Friday: 7:30 Pines Rest Home Ser vice St. Delight Sunday: 10:00 A.M. Sunday School 11:00 A.M. Morning Wor ship, Has the Devil Rocked You to Sleep? 7:00 P.M. Evening Service, What the Church has a right to expect from the Pastor; and what the Pastor has the right to expect from the church. You are cordially invited to attend each service, Ralph E. Clegg, Pastor. Church Of God Sunday: 10:00 A.M. Sunday School 11:00 A.M. Church Ser vices 7:30 P.M. Evening Services Tuesdays and Saturdays - 7:30 P.M. Evangelical Ser vices Location: The Mac Finch Home, Pruit Town Free Will Baptist "Train up a child in the way he should go: and when he is old, he will not depart from it" Proverbs 22:6 Sunday: 10:00 Sunday School 11:00 Morning Worship 6:45 Prayer Band 7:00 Evening Worship Come and visit with us at 929 N. Main St., Louisburg, J. Earl Gilliam, Pastor Union View Sunday: 10:00 A.M. Church School. Mr. Albert Weaver, Mr. Vallen Wright, Supt. 11:00 A.M. Worship Hoyr 6:00 P.M. Youth Choir Miss Alice Rogers. Director 7:00 P.M. Training Union Mr. Andrew Payne, Mr. Pern Gordon. Directors Wednesday: 7:30 P.M. Officer's and Teachers meeting 8:00 P.M. Bible Hour October 5 ? Revival starting Visiting pastor. Mr. W M Danieron ? Please be much in prayer for this Revival. Visitation Mondav through Saturday. Radio broadcast even Sunday A. M. 8:25 to 8:55. Louisburg. Rev. Gleen G. Short, Pastor Seven Paths Homecoming Day will be observed at Cypress Baptist Church on the first Sunday in October. All interested per sons please take note. Week ending with Mrs. Lucy Wilder. Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Collie, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Lartz were Mr. and. Mrs. Don McCathran and daughter. Mr. and Mrs Will Blagman and Mrs Susan Spittle of Wash ington. D. C.. Mr and Mrs. Johnn\ Witmer. Mrs. Cindy Reid and Kelly of Silver Spring* Md. . Mrs L. S Gay was in Newport News. Va. on Satur day to \i.sit with daughter, Mrs Joyce Matthews, who is WHAT WE BELIEVE AT SAINT'S DELIGHT FREE WILL BAPTIST CHURCH ROUTE 4, LOUISBURG, N. C. We stand for the verbal inspiration of the Bible, the deity of Christ, His blood atonement, salvation by faith, security of the believer, New Testament soul winning, home and foreign missions, and the premillennial return of Christ, opposes modernism, worldliness, and formalism Ralph E. Clegg, Pastor Franklinton Baptist Revival REV COOPER Revival services will be held at Franklinton Baptist Church . September, Ai-'iR Services will begin each even ing at 7:30. Rev. Dwight \V. Cooper, pastor of Grace Baptist Church in Fayetteville, will be the visiting minister. Rev. Cooper was born in l-aurens County. S. C. He received his A.B. degree from Furman Un iversity, and his B.D. and Th.M. degree from the South eastern Baptist Theological Seminary. He has. held pas torates in S. C., N. C., and Md. Song services will be led by Mr. C. L .King, who is mini ster of music of the KranRlin ton Baptist Church. Mr. King is a student at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary. The pastor. Horace L. Jack son. invites the public to at tend. A nursery will be pro vided each night. hospitalized. Mrs R C. Hunt it ill in a Rocky Mount hospital. Among the children coming home are Mrs. Marie Corbin of Dunn, and Mrs. Grace Har rison of South Carolina Mr. Vaughn Brubaker re turned home on Monday from Duke hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Spencer Smith were in Raleigh on Sunday with son Stanley and family. Alton Smith was in Butner to visit relatives. Weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Fisher and Carolyn were Mr. Grady Fisher of Nashville. Mr. and Mrs. Guy B. Proctor and children of Raleigh. Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Hunt of Norfolk, Va.. Mr. and Mrs. Ollie Fisher of Cedar Rock. Mr. and Mrs. David Fisher and children of Rocky Mount. Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Mc Gregor and Van of Garner was at the home of Mrs. Lee McGregor on Saturday. Mrs. Hubert Hoyle and Miss Rebecca Hoyle spent Monday with Mrs. Lucy Wil der, Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Collie. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Driver of New Hope, Mrs. Joseph A. Perry visited Mr. E. B. Moore on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Ben Proctor of Rocky Mount, Mrs. Doris Wilder and chidlren visited Mrs. Emma Moore during the weekend. Justice Mrs. Cooper .Young from Raleigh and Mis. Walter Strange from Mapleville visit ed Mrs. B. F. Wheless last Sunday afternoon. Mr. Dewitt Truckner from Peletier visited Mr. and Mrs. Z. T. Perry and other relatives in the community last Thurs day and Mr. Willard Truckner from Durham visited them Tuesday. Mrs. William White and Mr. and Mrs. Richard Free man from Leesburg, Fla. spent Thursday night with Mrs. Vera S. White and Mr. Carlos White. Mr. Calvin White from Merry Hill came Saturday and spent the night. Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Wheless and Mrs. Maybelle Wheless went to Roanoke, Va. last Friday for a long weekend in the home of Dr. and Mrs. James E. Wheless and child ren, Jimmy and Carol. Mr. and Mrs. George L. Broome and sons, Steven and Charles, attended the Crowe Arnette wedding in St. Luke's United Methodist Church at Charlotte Friday at 6 o'clock. They then spent the night with Mr. Broom's sister, Mrs. Lennie Blythe. Mrs. Bernice Harris was in Williamston several days the latter part of the week where she attended a Home Manage ment Training School. Mrs. W. H. Bennett and Mr. and Mr?. Darrell Riley from Greensboro were guest in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Marion Whet ess Sunday. Mrs. Robert Harris went with Mr and Mrs. R. B. Gill of Flat Rock Sunday to visit Byron Harris and Ricky Gill at the Frederick Military Academy In Portsmouth, Va. Mr. and Mrs. Tim Harris and son, Robert Allen, and Pamela Harris from Virginia Beach, Va. were there also for a visit. Mrs. Mollie Copped je and Mrs. Maybdle Bowden visited Mrs. Bowden's sister, Mrs Mary Hlllard at Durham Sun day. Mrs. Norman Wicks, Mrs. Cleveland Perry and Miss Shirley Perry attended the Worrell Bowden family re union at Sunset Park In Rocky Mount Sunday. Mr and Mrs. Melvln Nelma took Mrs. Wicks to Durham Sunday afternoon to get her husband who had been in Hill Haven Convalescent Center several months. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Wicks and children from Durham had supper with Mr. nd Mrs. Wicks. Guest in the Wicks' home For moat people, high ideal* arrive late in life, after financial wcurity or a guilt complex. I Monday afternoon were Mri. Edith Fleming from Rocky Mount and Mr. John Beery Fleming from Richmond, Va. Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Sykea from Spring Hope came that evening. Mr. and Mrs. Milton Shearin and sons, Barry and Gary, were in Norfolk, Va. for the weekend with Mri. Shearin's sister and her hus band. Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Bailey. Mr. Kenny Baker from Carolina Beach was a week end guest in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Carden, Jo Anne, Ricky and Howard Lee. Guest in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Onnie Bowden Sun day ,were Mrs. Dorothy Norris and girls. Dianne and Luanne from Butner and Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Bowden and daughter Michelle from Wilson. Concession Boom ? i - A season record was set hi 1968 when concession re ceipts totaled $41,351.14 at 15 NASCAR stock car racing events in municipally owned Bowman Gray Stadium at Winstpjn-Salem, N. C. Franklinton Mn. Paul Kiger of Salisb ury ii visiting her lister, Mis. W. F. Miller and Mr Miliar Margaret Weston, Davsy Seeor, Larry Goswlek, Charies Goswick, Mike Gos wlek. Gordon Wilder and Donna Holmes are students at N. C. State University in Ral eigh. Annette Ball, Mary Gor don East, Kathy Sherrod and Betty Ann Wilder have en rolled as Freshmen at the University of N. C. at Greens boro. Ruthie Pearce and Alice Green have returned to the University of N. C. st Greens boro to resume their studies. Brooks Bennett hss en rolled ss a student at Western Carolina at Cullowhee. Charter Member Ransom "Shorty" York of Mocksville, N. C? is the only driver still racing in weekly NASCAR stock car events at Bowman Gray Stadium in Winston-Salem, N. C., who competed in the first one on May 18, 1949. Today is 1970 at your Ford Dealers! Ford leaps into the 70s w ith newer, bolder, better ideas. They are ready and waiting at your Ford Dealer's now. Oome in and see the look o^ tomorrow . . . today! iOti 1970 Torino. All new clear through. No matter which 1970 Torino you choose, you'll be driving the most completely changed car of the year. New shape New size New style. New power. There are 14 models in all. And you're sure to find one that gives you the value, performance of luxury you want. 1970 Ford. Take a Quiet Break. Move into the quieter world of the sleek new Fords for 1 970. Take your choicp ot five great V-8's and 21 different models including the elegant LTD and popular Galaxie 500. The new Ford gives you a ride so smooth and vibration-free that you have to test drive it to believe it. 1970 Mustang. Run with Number One. No doubt about America's favorite sporty car: it's Mustang all the way! Take your choice ot six different models. Three different rooflines. Nine different engines Mustang s designed to be designed by you. Find out why Mustang's really Num ber One for so many drivers. Ford gives you Better Ideas. It's the Going Thing! rDIEEIM MOTOR rOMPANY ,04 s Bicke,t BN Louisbl"8' N' UKIrrlH Iflwlwll VUfflrAn I N. C. Lic?n?# No 1004 Ford's Jill-new I *>T0 Kauehcro luxury pickup truck mliU a ii?w top-of-thclinc model, the Kauchcro s<|iiirc (tup), featuring the ultiiuute in cur luxury combined it It tlic functional charactcrislir* of u truck. Tlic "cur with tlie hiji trunk" nmic? in stundnrd or Squire models, or ui> tlie Kunchcru (#T with hut performance fluir. The K-100 pickup (lioltom), uliown with the lluiitfcr luxury opium croup, Ik un suitable for tuuich construction or furm joh* mm it in for Kninic to the grocery store or the cnuutry cluli. Willi u rmlyled grille untl new options, Kuril's 1970 pickup line retains its exee|lc?kl bundling characteristic* with the exclusive Twiii-I-Beum front ?u? prnilon. IGA WEEK-END SPECIALS FROSTY MORN WHOLE SMOKED PICNICS - 43* SAV-MOR BOLOGNA ? 59* FROSTY DANDY SAUSAGE r?" 1.09 STAR COUNTRY ' HAM >? 1.09 IGA HOT DOG OR HAMBURGER _ ^ ROILS 2 ~ 3?< SAV-MOR SALAD DRESSING - 29t IGA BUTTER MILK BISCUITS - 39 1 PILLSBURY PANCAKE MIX 2-- 39( IGA CREAM . PIES - 22t DIXIE CRYSTAL C ? SUGAR A =" 29* COFFEE -- 1-37 MEDIUM i _ _ ONIONS 3? 25* FANCY RED DELICIOUS APPLES 2 - 39* CABBAGE - 5* ? SAVE I0UI MK MH? "Si"1 ilOO.OO
The Franklin Times (Louisburg, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 18, 1969, edition 1
5
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