Friday, January 28, 1944 Mb * i Above are Rev. and Mrs William E. Anderson, of Morehead City, formerly of Wendell, who celebrated their Golden Wedding Anni versary at the Women's Club, Wendell, on Sunday, January 23rd. rect.ving friends from 3:00 to 5:00 o'clock in the afternoon and from 7:00 to 9:00 o'clock in the evening. 14 Million Cords Your Boy Needs Why are 14,000,000 cords of pulpwood needed in 1944? A clear-cut answer may be found in the disclosure that the Army Service Forces, whose job ti is to equip American invasion forces, plan to land six tons of supplies initially for every Amer ican overseas and an additional ton for the first sixty days. What’s the connection? Well, practically every bit of equipment, all food and medical supplies, and most ammunition are all packaged in paper or paper board before being shipped abroad. And that takes a lot of pulpwood. Without the protection of pulp LIST YOUR The law requires that taxes be listed in the month of January. A penalty will be added for failure to list. See your lister at once and avoid this penalty. D. B. HARRISON COUNTY TAX SUPERVISOR. Brooders, Feeders, Waterers. U. S. APPROVED BABY CHICKS. OYSTER SHELLS, PURINA FEEDS MASSEY HATCHERY Zebulon, N. C. wood products, many of these vital supplies might never reach their destination or else be unable because of spoilage. Pulpwood | shields them from bad weather, ; salt water, and cushions them ! against • the inevitable rough handling. Many persons have become cal j lous to appeals based on big fig ures since the outbreak of the war. One reads daily about billions ol dollars being spent, millions of this or that being needed. So let s put it another way: Your boy or your neighbor’s boy overseas, poised for the inva | sion, needs six tons of supplies packed in pulpwood. How many cords are you going to cut for him? Envy, rivalry , hate need no temporary indulgence that they be destroyed through suffering; they should be stifled from lack of air and freedom.—Mary Baker Eddy. The Zebulon Record Prosperity is a great teacher, adversity is a greater. Possession pampers the mind; privation trains and strengthens it.—Haz lott. It is the temper of the highest hearts to strive most upwards when they are most burdened. —Sir Philip Sidney Lowliness of heart is real dig nity, and humility is the bright est jewel in the Christian’s crown. —Bond. The doctrines of grace humble man without degrading, and ex alt without inflating him.—Char les Hodge. Trees the most lovingly shelter and shade us when, like the wil low, the higher soar their sum mits, the lowlier droop their boughs.—Bulwer-Lytton. Love is not puffed up; and the meek and loving, God annoints and appoints to lead the line of mankind’s triumphal march out of the wilderness, out of darkness into light.—Mary Baker Eddy. Humility enforces where neith er virtue, nor strength, nor rea son cah prevail.—Quarles. Humility is to make a right es timate of one’s self. It is no hu mility for a man to think less of himself than he ought, though it might '-other puzzle him to do that.—C. H. Spurgeon. Stop waving the Flos—. START WESTS ’HE AX! Every cord of pulpwood y«u can - cut ; s needed to meet the coun- ~ try V wartime needs. If you have suitable wood you can cut, write ★ or phone us now. We are paying , top ceiling prices —prices are at * a peak take advantege of if . quickly. * | sc I»