Newspapers / The Sylva Herald and … / April 3, 1947, edition 1 / Page 2
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Directory of Local Churches WEBSTER METHODIST CHARGE (The Rev. E. A. Fitzgerald, Pastor) ?Webster The sermon theme lor the charge for Sunday, April 6, will be, "Ap pointments For Eternity." 7 a. m. Easter Sunrise service at the church. Sunday school each Sunday at 10 a. m. Wesleyanna Sunday school each Sunday at 10 a. m. Love's Chapel ti:3(J Ea*ter Sunrise service. Sunday school each Sunday at 10 a. m. Preaching .services 1st Sunday at 8 p. m. and 3rd Sunday at 11 a. m. East La Porte Sunday school each Sunday at 10 a. m. Preaching seryices 2nd Sunday at 8 p. m. and 4th Sunday at 11 a. m. Speedwell Sunday school each Sunday at 10 a. m. in cooperation with the Baptist church. Preaching services 2nd Sunday at 11 a. m. and 4th Sunday at 8 p. m. Sylva Methodist (The Rev. W. Q. Grigg, Pastor) 5:45 a. m. E.tster Sunrise service at Keener cemetery. Sunday school will meet at 10 a. m., Gudger Crawford, superin tendent. 11 a. m. An Easter Meditation hour will be led by the pastor. 6:30 p. m., Youth Fellowship; # Cullowhee Methodist UNDER 12 Trieno it the mild jenno laxative mbu " ? specially for children under 12. Eo>; to take. Flavored with delicious prune juice. Prompt acting, reliable. For quisle relief from annoying children* constipa tion, give TRIENA. Sat hfaction guaranteed. Caution: use only as UMi directed 30c, large size, 50c. (The Rev. R. T. Mouti, Jr., Pastor) Church School at 10 A. M. 11:45 Morning worship. At this time the choir will present a pro gram of Easter music. 5 p. m. Youth Fellowship will meet with Mi>s Jo Ann Sutton a worship program and Easte.j .so cial. 7 p. m. Wesley Foundation will meet. a p. m. Union services to be in this church with the Baptist minister delivering the sermon. Sylva Baptist (The Rev. C. M. Warren, Pastor) 5:45 a. m. Easter Sunti-e -strrri-ctr at Keener Cemetery. Worship service will be held at 11 a. in., the pastor using for his .^abject "A live Forevermore." At 7:30 p. m. toe CiiOii* will ren tier the Easter cantata "The Tn< in - Crowned King." Sunday school at ^10 a. m., How . aid Ball, Supt. B. T. U. at 6:30 p. m., Carl Cor bin, director. | Tuesday, t:15 p. m. Prayer meet j in Friday, 7:30 p. m. choir rehearsal. Each Monday at 10:30 a. m. the j 3apt:st Ministers' Conference meets I here. I I j Cullovvhee Baptist, ! (The Rev. Mark R. Osborne, J*., Pastor) Morning worship will be held at 11 o'clock, the pastor using for his subject. "The Triumph of the Empty Tomb." Sunday school meets at 9:50 a. m. Deacon's Study Course will be conducted at 3 p. m. Junior and Intermediate B. T. U. at 4 p. m. and Young People's B.T.U.?and Fellowship hour .tl (i p. m. Evening worship in union with the Methodist congregation at the Methodist church at 8 o'clock. The Baptist minister speaking on the subject, "He Is Risen." Tuesday?Baptist Student Union council meeting will convene at 7:15 p. m. Wednesday, 3:15 p. m. Junior and Intermediate H. A. meeting. Friday?7:30 p. rr*. Full choir re hearsal at the church. Participation in the 1947 potato crop price support is limited to growers who have complied with potato acreage goals. Forty-nine Swain County farm people recently ordered strawber ry plants of the Ma.-sey variety. Edward P. Churchwell Rites Held Sunday Funeral rites for Edward P. Churchwell, 77, who died Friday at the home or his daughter, Mrs. James Clements, in Sylva, were held Sunday afternoon at 2 o'clock .it Apple Valley Baptist church, ear Commerce. Ga. The Rev. A. O. Hood and Rev. Tom Hardaman of iciated :?rjd burial followed in the . miiy pi. f :n the church cemttery. Active pallbearers,' grandsons of the deceased, were Lionel Potts, Jimmy Clements, Billy Porter, Aubrey Potts,-J. C. Jackson, and Clyde \>:.?>id. Flowerbearers were ^i.-.-nd-i. ..^.r.e:> al.-o of the de ce i>el. J !.?. C .nvh well was connect 2d w'l 1 t I'j.-ck .v u.)d Lumber Co. 1 | for .?er of years, but had 1 "irmr ?t.m "?.??. ? r. i. n, w r. ! must . t?me :'?);? the past live yea - -. 1:>. -r.TT rTflTTMi ?. dr-TTTents, he ? is ; 1: .. 11 i ov f:ve other daugh 5 te.--, .. I.uia Putts, Jefferson, O: .. M .M.!lie Lane. Columbia, S. C , D >r!> Tnomas, Knox vi!l", T'. :::i? Mr>. Neil Porter, Lake Alrre i. Kla., and Miss Etta Ruth Cnu. l .?/ei!, M<Jrganton; s e v e n o?io,. K.i.-eli Churchwell of New Mexu-?. R >bcrtN Churchwell, Oak la d, C Olander Churchwell. CfkiU -la '.;a. Tenn., F \ a 1; k i e C> tec iw'.*;i, Bryson ? City, O.lie 1 Ciiuiv.iv.'-'I:. Tucka-eigce; and Quinl. iid ail Roy Churchwell of Calilo.; t wo brothers, Joel J. Churcnv.vl). Pleasant Piains, Ark., and Ben C''urcnweli, Fort Worth, Te\'i>; 1' . arandcluldren, and five are it c. s: 1 clchildren. Vesper Services At Methodist Church The inllowir.g program will be ?en 'ere i at the Ea.-ter Vesper -vrvice at t!ie Sylva Methodist church .1; 4:30 o'clock Sunday afterno.m: Prelude. Air.,a in, "Boaollul Savior." Old C r ti s a d e r Hymn, arranged by Riegger. Hymn, "Christ the Lord I ?; Ri on Today," :roni Lyra Davidica. So 1??. "Alleluja!," Mozart, by Miss Alice Weaver. Duet, ?'Emmanuel." C. Whitney Coombs, by Miss Christine Aycock and Mrs. Gulley. Semi-chorus. "Jesus Lives," Heyser. Duet, "Thev Shall Hunger No Moref" Gaul, by Mrs. Dan Moore and Mrs. Gtilley. Anthem. "They that Sow in Tears." Gaul. Hymn. "All Hail the Power of Je.>u> Name," Holden. Po-tlude. Ij.rector. Mrs. Chas. G. Gulley; ae<ompani.>t, Mrs. Paul Ellis. Now's the time to "step on it." It's time to get that last minute Easter frock. Make it a lovely creation-from BELK'S DEPART MENT STORE. You'll look extra sweet to family and friends in one of our latest fashions. LAST MINUTE PL f Vfii Hv 'fa hen Car ft of Whatever Are Your Seeds If i1\ ? ? you will find what you want among our Nationally Advertised lines of McKettrick, George Hess, Betty Hartford, Johnny, Jr., or Darlene, Jr. s.7. to to $w.r>o If iimH lluiu m. m. be-flowered, be-ribboned, be-veiled ? Iar-ge brims, small brims, or no-brims . . . all of them are lovely^? and you will find one to suit your personality here in our store. sunt to THE HOM E OF PfrONE 2 37 ER VALUES YL VAj A/. C. Weekly SEKMOIN'ET And v?ry early in the morning the first day of the week, they came unto the sepulcher at the ris ing of the sun. Luke 16:2. It was very early in the morn ing, yes, while it was yet dark, that Jesus rose from the dead. GOD'S GARDEN Let us picture in our imagina tion a lovely garden of flowers of i various kinds and colors blooming in profusion. Fragrant flowers, som? tall, some low?each arranged where best it can grow. Flowers you hke, flowers I like, flowers to r.u;t every individual. Then in the 1 garden let us imagine a section giv en over to vegetables. They grow l.iml 'I'nom h'lVH foliage n.nH : blossoms as well as the flower in. the first part of our garden. Their rtfritermg fruits add color and value |*o the garden oJ| our imagination. This is a lovely garden of our I imagination and we admire it for ? its beauty. But its beauty is to be : enjoyed by more than its owner and for far mare than its beauty alone. We gather flowers from our garden?some go to shut-ins, some to home of friends in sorrow, and some to friends and neighbors. And to each one the>e flowers spread a wave of love and appreciation? nourishing the Soul. Out vegetable garden serves a similar purpose. The vegetables nourish the body and the soul. We use them for our family, we share 'hem with our neighbors, we di . vide w.th those in need. Our 'schools, orphanages, and charity | cases oiten rcccive foods from our j gardens. Then it is that not our bodies only are nourished but our j?ouls also. ' We have been speaking of this garden as our garden, but our sub it ct is "God's Garden." Let us think now of the world as God's Garden j and count ourselves among the rinwerr mrl ->hl^ Wh'M kind ol flower or vegetable are we? Are we serving in the right place and d >:ng the best we can? Are we Miur.tcd and dwarfed in our serv k e to others lor lack of cultivation or -Judy on our part? God has each of us a talent, we be lieve, and we are to cultivate it for use and^Gud's glory A florist was working among h:s flowers. Ore day as he toiled in the morning sun one of his fa vorite plants fell and the pot was broken by the fall. But the flower was not injured at all. The gar dener carefully picked up the plant, placed it in some fresh soil in a larger and better pot, and soon it began to grow and blossom in great beauty. Our souls are the flowers, our bodies the flower pots which get broken and must be replaced. This is something not to make us sad, but glad. We are not to die alone, but to live again. Christ said, "I am the resurrection and life." Yes. he suffered and died and is ri6en that we may have life? glorious and ,?lad and eternal. Ton of the twenty advisory com m it toes that will serve in connec tion with the Research and Market ir.4 Act of 1946 have been appoint ed, according to an announce ment by the U. S. Department of Agriculture. Latest additions to the total were Dry Beans and Peas, and the Soybeans and Flaxseed Ad visory Committee. Guest singers: Miss Alice Weav er, Messrs. Clarence Chrisman, Joe Crum, and Kendall Grady. This annual concert is one of the highlights of the Easter season and the public is cordially invited to attend. CONCRETE BLOCKS Let Us Know Your Needs ? Corner Blocks ? Foundation Blocks ? Guaranteed Blocks ?AT? REASONABLE PRICES ESTIMATES FURNISHED .On Request Sold On. Yard At Dillsboro or DELIVERED ANYWHERE Office At Moody Funeral Home JACKSON CEMENT BLOCK CO, SYLVA, N. C. Baptist Cfioir To Present Concert The Choir of the Sylva Baptist Church will render the Easter Can tata "The Thorn-Crowned King," by Fred Holton, on Sunday, April 6, at 7:30 p. m. This is the annual Easter music and will be greatly enjoyed by all. A cordial invitation is extended to all. The Choii; is under the direction of Mrs. E. P. Stillwell. The mem bers are as following: Sopranos?Mrs. W. T. Brown, Mrs. Porter Scroggs, Mrs. John R. Jones, Mrs. Leo Cowan, Mrs. 1 Crawford Smith, Mrs. Chester Scott, Miss Mary Cole Stillwell, Mi.-s Edm> Allen, Miss Rebecca > Wil.-on, Miss Mary Henson. Altos?Mrs. Roger Dillard, Mrs. ' J. 15. EnsTey," Miss' Miss Sadie Luck, Miss Sadie Queen. Tenors?Didk Greene, Tommy Davis, H. E. Monteith, W. C. Hen nessee, C. M. Warren. Basses?J. T. Gribble, W. J. Fisher, Claude Jones, John Echols, Chester Scott. J. C. Henderson 111 At Webster Home Friends of J. C. Henderson will regret to learn of his serious ill - jne.-s and will wish him a speedy I recovery. Mrs. John W. Nicholson,, of Pis gah Forest spent last week with her father. Mrs. Mary Sentelle and little daughter, Claudia, of Bre vard were also visitors at the Hen derson home. Mrs. Gulley Serves As Judge In Virginia Contest rs. Chas. G. Gulley, of West ern Carolina Teachers College, re turned Monday from Richmond where she acted as judge in the Capital District Music Club con test. States represented were Vir Card Of Thanks "Aunt" Zelie Wells wishes to thank Rev. L. E. Mabry, pastor of M. E. Church, Canton, and the members of his chlirch for the lovely wreath of flowers and for $20.92 given her to aid with the expenses of the funeral of her son, Shade Wells, who died in Canton Sunday, March 23, and was buried syiui on Monday. ginia, West Virginia, Maryland and the District of Columbia. Other judges in the vocal division were Mrs. Theo W. Risebrook of Rich mond and Mrs. Esbey, vocal teach er of Washington, D. C. While in Richmond Mrs. GuTiey was the guest of Mrs. Risebrook\and sang the offertory solo at oVer brook Presbyterian Church morning service, using "There is a Green Hill Far Away," by Gounod. Send . . . . IALLMARK Our Cards Express Your Thoudhtfulness Whether it be the first or fiftieth anniversary card you seek?ryou'll find it here. Birthday Greetings both comic and sentimental ;.re our specialties. Add a little spot of cheer to the life of an ill friend with one of our gay convalescent cards, Our Greeting Cards will express . > -iAg-yrm How yniiph ynn parp The Book Store In The Herald Building MAIN STREET PHONE 110 We Could Build A Truck ? We don't think there's a part which can't be found in our supply bins. We're certain that there isn't a phase of auto construction our experts can't handle. That's why we're for voyi ? for truck repair! Kirk-Davis Chevrolet Co 'CHEVROLET
The Sylva Herald and Ruralite (Sylva, N.C.)
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April 3, 1947, edition 1
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