: ax GARDEN TIME iSf. E. GARDNER ,v e ' ' J haw advised you from time to time concerning tho use. of "AH-Purpose" dust and sprays to control toth Insects and diseases on apples, 'pears, peaches, vegeta bles and ornamental plants. I used one of them on my ornament als and chrysanthemums last week and it did a good job. Some home gardeners feel that mi-mra am more : effective than "i" "j " - dusts, and I am inclined to agree, wnse most Deoole do a more thorough iob with arrays. If you want to have materials on hand to do your own mixing, I suggest the following for one gallon of w ter: three tablespoonfuls of 25 ner cent Malathion; two table spoonfuls of 50 per cent DDT; and two tablespoonfuls of 50 per cent Captan. These are purchased as wettable powders and can be bought from your seedsman or your dealer in spray chemicals. Store your materials in something dike a bell jar and in a safe place. Then you can use them as need ed. Use this mixture only on your ornamentals as both Gaptan See actual road-test proof! D0D6E outperforms "other tivolow-priced trucks! They're off! All three low-priced truckare hned up at the bottom of a test grade equal to the steepest hill in San Francisco. The flag drops, and this grueling test of climbing power is officially underway. Dodge takes an early lead. Hi.' Halfway p. The extra V-8 power under the hood of the Dodge sends it quickly ahead. It s already two lengths out front And there's a 1000-lb. test load on each one of these comparably equipped trucks. What's more, Dodge is still gaining! 4 Dodge flashes part JJ&Jg& rof competition. Truck "CT m track ."TT jart , couldn't match that And this asipst one of "WeJ ffSV I prove AWdge m De w O Terr CcJs track issb bsfrf "d "Cc?:i liis b cosy wcys. Ccr.8 b . . ; i:2 1;'..:r r"H tcst-phcta scqsssccs .. . C.J ! ICC. ... wTC-.J ! and DDT leav poison residues on vegetables, , , Fungus gall on azalea ana camellia leave are widespread mrt vnn mav find them on your plants.'' If you, do, remove the af fected leaves an destroy ,ny Burn ing. This is all you can do now. Nurserymen who grow : azaleas in large numbers sometimes Ijna it necessary to spray their plants with Bordeaux mixture beginning soon after bloom and at two weeK intervals until mid-June. This trouble is worse when the weather is warm and humid. Of all the troublesome "crit ters" perhaps the spider mite is the worst, because it frequently works unnoticed. Examine the undersides of the leaves. They are real small but can be seen with the naked eye. Better still, buy a low powered lens for leaf examination. When found, get busy with Malathion and do a thorough job of spraying or dust ing. Spider mites have been es pecially troublesome on strawber ries this year in eastern Caroli na. Dust is better for control be cause the plants are so close to the ground that spraying is diffi cult. Force the dust downward so that it will rise and cover the undersides of the leaves. Spray ing is also effective if you use -7 t; ww-jw- --- - , ' o W COali: i .1 ' MRS, JANIE RAMSEY - iH. D, Agent A COLLECT FOR CLVB" WOMEN Keep us, oh God, from pettiness; let us be large in thought, in word, in deed. 1 ' , ' Let us be done with fault-finding and leave off self-seeking.; May we put away all pretense and meet each other face fo face without selfipity and without prejudice. Y'-'f'' May we be never, hasty r,.in judgment and always generous; ';? Let us take time for all things; make us to grow calm, serene, gentle. ' .'? Teach us to put into action our better impulses, strightforward and unafraid. Grant that we may realize It is the little things that create differ ences, that in the big things of life we are as one. '7: And may we strive to touch and to know the great, common human heart of us all, and, oh Lord oGd, let us forget not to be kind! The main center of interest this week is Craft Camp. The eighth annual workshop is being held Tuesday, Wednesday and Thurs day at Camp Schaub, near Waynesville. Home demonstration club members are given the op portunity to learn (for a small fee) to make articles in aluminum, copper, basketry, weaving, leath er craft, chair bottoming, dTawn work, silk screenings and woven rugs. Many other subjects in handicraft are taught. Mrs. Elmore Carter and Mrs. Shadrick Mace, who will teach the art of chair bottoming with corn shucks, accompanied Mrs. Janie Ramsey to Canvp Tuesday. Other members from Madison County are expected to join them Wed nesday for a day of work in han dicraft. ' As June is "Dairy Month," a recipe that has created much in terest for using more milk in di et is as follows: FRUI1T, MILK & EGG-NOG 2 eggs, slightly beaten cup sugar 4 teaspoon salt 1 cups scalded milk VA cups cold milk teaspoon -vanilla extract 1 can (12 oi.) apricot ftecar Vi cup whipping cream,' whipped Mix eesrs. sugar and salt Pur scalded milk slowly into egg mix ture, stirring to blend. Cook, stir ring constantly in double boiler over simmering water until mix ture coats spoon. Remove from heat immediately. Add cold milk and vanilla. Beat with egg beat er. Add chilled apricot nectar and whipped cream.. Blend and serve chilled. Makes 4 cups. Schedule of Home Demonstration Clubs In County 9 v Tuesday, June 11 Paint Fork with Mrs. J. G. Gardner. Wednesday, June 12 Laurel Branch. Friday, June 14 Hayes Run with Mrs. Clara Crowe. BALL CITY Everyone enjoyed the singing convention at Liberty Baptist Church Sunday afternoon. j Mr. and Mrs. Denver Moore' and family, Mr. C. W. Fish, Mrs. Avery Allen and daughter, Cathy, and Mr. and Mrs. Medford Bur gess and son, Sam, were visiting Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Moore Sun day. Mr. and Mrs. Avery Allen and family were visiting Mr. and Mrs. Tailor Allen of Fines Creek Sun day morning. Carolyn Moore spent the week end with Mr. and Mrs. Norman Arrinirton of Iron Duff. Rev. and Mrs. D. D. Russell were, visiting Mr. and Mrs. Loyd Fish Saturday. Jo Ana Allen took dinner Sun day with Agnee :Maua,?- "f Glen Stevenson, spent Friday nkrht with David Moore. - : Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Price and family , were ,visHing - iMr, and Mrs. Alton fries Sunday .v1 7 TTe are sorry to . hear that Mr Floyd. FLa Is on tie sick list We hope for Hm a speedy recovery. Mr. Loyd Fkh was visiting Mr, a"d T'rs. T tver 1'oore and C W. I ' Sur.-. f morxing; '. the rifel.t trpe cf nozde and suf f'xient pressure. H W Y, . T.l of, the E By Rev. 'tiriu Smmrimt Q ' THERE IS A FOUNTAIN FILLED WMH BLOOD 'Both accounts are in the Gos pel of John," the forty-year old clergyman, William Cowper,' said to hta minister fneno, jonn xxew tnn. Win the ninth chapter of ,W Gospel, John records the story of Jesus healing the bna man, in ter the disciples had asked him, Who did sin, this man or his par ents that h was born blind? To Which Jesus had replied, Neither hath this man sinned nor his par ents," but that the works of God matf h made manifest in him. ml Ik. Muster soit on the JWU ; wc J.l onH made clay of the spit " - . tW .rul with the clay he anointed the Wind man's eyes and said to him. Go and wash m the pool oi SUoami the blind man went nis way, and washed, and oame see ing." , , I - ' fWlhat is the other story," Newton asked the preacher poet as the two men visited in the yard otCowper'a home, which adjoined the back yard of Newton's par sonage 'at Olney, England, that afternoon in 1771- "It is the account of Jesus heal ing he infirm man at the pool of Bethesda as it is recorded for us in the (fifth chapter of John. In this case, the man who had been a helpless invalid for some thirty eight years said to the Lord, Sir, r i.. man .when the water is a. ivf t troubled, to put me in the pool; but while I am coming, another steppeth down before me. He said that, because the water in the pool .bubbled up every so of fcen. nd the neople believed that an ange periodically troubled the water, and that the urst sick. p son to ftep' into it would im- I'ed of his disease. the Lord bed and Joi m? to iOI hAAutSul an . yne.jiutTiusht .in vci. www rrrr'--- r -' .it fchatimart from strict obe dience to his orders, there would be no healing. When Namaan nWved and nlunged beneath the stream of Jordan, and did it sev en times, his leprosy, left him ana he returned home completely cur ed." "I feel that the Lord has dealt with me, in, a similar manner," Cowper1 Interrupted.' "After be ing in a state! of suspense for ma ny years because of the feeling that God had not elected me to timl aalvation. and that there fore I was to be numbered torev er with the eternally damned, I was warmly converted under the influence of an Evangelical min ister like yourself. At that mo ment, I-felt that my whole soul was being bathed in the healing floods of the love of God." "When was that?" Newton ask- "Just seven years ago, in 1764, ' Cowper answered, "When I was thirtyhree years of age. ft was a strongefexperience,' he con tinued, "because I felt at that mo ment thaV myiOwn sins 'were, as vile as those of the tniei-wmo w crucified with Jesus, the dying thief whose cry for part " Master heard and answerea ai f. r And 1 also felt at the very same tune that he heard my cry and paraonea a t the wnnthvof nis intunate friendship and held me tightiy ta ender ent&race ox his , healing love.'TA . ' ' Cowper, whose delkate soul hd suffered a terrific strain at the j.ii. v;. nvnUher when ont a lad of six. aad nature had Deen suoj:v rnsv mniMiJFkJB . School, now rpei enced periodic ana wag i , a . nd melancholia, . 11. v. v. ourht.t take his own rife in a futile attempt'' to': til away mgd , . mBA T. USlf WW w- n of his preacher friend and the " or. ' t John- Newton ano enconTagement . of anions, xestorea of 1 cor v ben these spirit- fifrtirred. Now, In ;rc!y normal peri- or, o ' V and one that he upon as smorg r.ad ever known, It was Vthat nam . w -m r -av Test V- ing 1 V off l vet uie ,.or wa- he and Newton were hard at work on a new hymnal for the Church at Olney, a volume that waa pub lished later as "Ulney JHymna." lie had written his poetic autobi- ograiphy in 1769 in the hymn "0 tor a closer walk "with Uoa," which was one of the sixtv-seven he prepared for the proposed vol ume, ; while Newton was already hard at work on some of "the two hundred eightyone he eventually wrote, in a desire to promojte "the faith 'and . comfort of sincere Christians." ' "The two men continued their conversation and soon were dis cussing whether the pool ofJ3i loam was actually a pool or a fountain. "The Greek word is a bit ambiguous," Newton said, "and can actually mean either one. Be thesda, however, was a pool and was filled from a ' spring that bubbled up from the ground. We usually think of a fountain as springing up and bubbling over, while we speak of a pool as be ing filled7 with water, either from a spring underneath or by means ef water conveyed through a con duit above the water line of the pool, that feeds the water into it." Cowper then opened the Bible and read aloud from Zechariah 13:1, prefacing the reading with these words, "Zechariah prophe sied about a fountain that God would prepare for the cleansing and purgation of Jerusalem in these words. In that day there shall be a fountain opened to the house of David, and to the inhab itants of Jerusalem for sin afld uncleanness. Even as God provid ed the fountain for his people un der the old dispensation, so he provides for us the blood of Je sus under the new dispensation, the blood which the Lord said "is shed for many for the remission of sins" (Matthew 26:28). As the ancient Jews plunged beneath one flood for their cleansing, so wo Christians plunge beneath an other for ours. The stream that flows from the wounded side of the Saviour washes away our sins So we may present ourselves clean and pure to our heavenly Father." With ' ' those thoughts ; in his mind, Wuliam Cowper (1781 1800), whose poem "John Gilpin's Ride" became an English classic, and whose 'volume "The-Task" iassured him a lasting place among I . - . . ' - if- .-. -i ' ., ..AVi-r.d til. folV. wrote a hyma as autobiographtetil as NewtonV masterpiece f Amaz ing Grace." Under the ' caption "Praise For The Fountain Open ed," Cowper wrote- seven four-line stanzas, the most familiar being these: There is a fountain filled with blood Drawn from Emmanuels veins, that flood And Sinner . plunged beneath Lose all their guilty stains. The dying thief rejoiced to see That Fountain in his day And there have I, as vile as he, Washed all my sins away. F.Vr since bv faith I saw the stream Thy flowing wounds supply, Redeeming love has been my theme And shall be till I die Then in a nobler, sweeter song, I'll sing thy power to save, Whan this ooor lisping, stam mering tongue Lies silent in the grave. While the ereat English editor James Montgomery, at- .f tempted to improve Cowpers' lines by re-wording his thoughts more impersonally, the original rather than the alteration lives on In the hvmnals of today. As sung with many added curlicues by southern adaptations of the hymn tnne fCowper," composed by iweu Mason for this poem and named for its author, this hymn became juite popular aunng im "- teenth century. It deserves to become . a permanent .partr of Christian hvmnody as a grannie example of yesteryear's figure. f fpeedh and emphases, which mov ed (worshippers, to . terror ana to tears, while wtoting sinners to the healing power that flows from the Lamb of God. While we may iav : nntirrown' it Imaeerv. . we can never outgrow the faith whica insnired it. and while the Idioms of Cowioer may hot be as readily accepted by this generation as by his, nevertheless, the basic troths which - thev- exalted are eternal and the spiritual concepts they expressed are forever "valid I Always remember that -all the i:nwledc fa ' the world was ac quired t the expense ef others' burnt fingers..-..'-., t- '-'i '- in XU$ swnSl of Uroism whose WM , ( ' i. I Hwmw l hw oeMwfcpeA w A nlU ml i A ISS1 Th - ' . plot engine to tot SretdL Thfeagli k 1 . . w . .1 I . gnna, m h m now w Mtoge no we awnng wmwn gr rxxmj tFOM wm In to News for Veterans A more liberal definition of the term "widow" is used to determine eligibility for compensation pay ments to the survivor of a veteran who dies of a service-connected cause on or after January 1, 1957. Veterans ' Administration said the new definition is established by the Survivor Benems Act which became effective January 1, 1957. For service connected deaths on or after that date, the widow may qualify for VA death pay ments if: 1. A child was born of the mar riage; or, 2. If no child, the widow was married to the veteran before or during his service; or, 3. If no child and if not mar ried before or during his service, She married , him within 15 years after the duty period when the service-connected injury or disease that caused his death occurred; or 5 4: If no child;; and if married more ton 15 years after the fore going duty period., she w mar: ried to the veteran fiv or more years before hs death. , VA said the widow must have lived with the veteran from the time of marriage until his death, except where a separation was due to the misconduct of the hus band, or was procured by the husband without fault on the part of the widow. VA said previous laws for service-connected deaths before January 1, 1957 generally provide HO-HUMMMll What This Place Needs, Folks. Is A Few Good Ads In This NEWSPAPER wKSM C7i . 1 Qti&faem i I .. ; IVSJlllSlL, II. C rcn r:c:;.uAi:D czuvrv y i y SW. of bw. (lod -to!. rji. i 1 in... rj A kaandary M4 pfomd by cf lS-Krt SMrf. 4 tad Dwn e mmm , v . e cVwdbam hmA mrt am) tUsfc l 1. . W e Okmjtybomi ptamgu tain U l sn W, V nis yowg gjil went out Wo ne dwfcnM and As Hons. She ad W pom wy on hamfa MJkm tone DM Momt turn onog an mv. wm of Bw dkngw nd ewt OBMlW. The road to happiness leaves more memories in the mind if it was full of pitfalls in places. OUR JOB PRINTING ISRIOHTIN TPE GROOVE shorter periods within which the marriage must nave oeen pei- formed and do not establish a widow's eligibility solely because a child was born of the marriage. VA stressed that widows who were ineligible before January 1, 1957 remain ineligible under the new law. SHUPE PLANING MILL . W Manufacture WAGONS, TRUCK BODWj - Plane Lumber and any kind of woodwork ' " " t "' SHUPE PLANING v MILL Formerly Brigman Wagon Co. GEORGE B. SHUPE, Owner .. WALNUT, N. C - BOY, 12, AT HARVARD Cambridge, Mass. Among the freshmen students at Harvard this year is Fred Safier, of Berkeley, California. Fred, who is only 12 years old, plans to be a nuclear physicist. DON'T SCRATCH THAT ITCH! IN JUST 15 MINUTES Your 40c back at any drug store if not pleased. Easy-ito-apply ITCH-ME-NOT deadens itch in MINUTES; kills germs on CON TACT. Fine for eczema, ring nom. insect bites, foot itdh and other surface itches. Guaranteed locally by w . MOORE'S PHARMACY The moth Season is already here.. Don't wait too lonfir about having your Fall and Winter crothes pror erly cleaned. Our modern cleaning methods will not only remove com mon dirt and spots, but will " KILL, ALL MOT0 LARVAE - Do As Millions Do Every .Spring "Have.All Your Woolens Thoroughly DRY- CLEAlfe) and SfeALED IN v MOTHPROOF .CEDARIZED V. 7: BAGS lt ,

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