Newspapers / The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.) / Feb. 22, 1962, edition 1 / Page 2
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s )' EEIiNADETTE W. HOYLE Public Information Officer North Carolina Stat Board 0 Publis WWare o , .(2 Ai it the t!nd of a tenet explaining public welfare in North 1 Carolina.) in JNontm (Jaroiaiia am across i the mention public welfare agencies , provide ; financial assistance to persona eligible for old age sisUamoe, aid to dependent chil dren, ami aid to ifihe permanently and totally disabled. The last manned prograim aid - to the permanently and totally disabled da for needy (persona between the ages of 18 and 65 who are , physically - or mentally must be making their home in the State; must not be inmates of a (public inert ifbutiaru; and imuat be in meed because they do not have A.a 1 i a i . J orau requirements at oai- jjq ly iavang suca as (rood, cioWiing, shelter, and other necessary itema. ' A typical case that of Lu ther, sawmill 'worker shows how add to i!he permanently and totally disabled has made it pas sable far a man and bis wife to have the necessities of life when he has been incapacitated. Luther had always 'worked hard and (had been employed by the same man for a number of yean as a sawmill helper. Last year he fell on an icy eidewfailk and broke a leg. The fracture was complicated by the fact ithait he did not receive medical attention for several days after .the acci dent. Except for .Unas injury he is a strong, healthy man, but is onjatMe ito work. He was in the hospital for 20 days and for nine months ihe leg was fa a cast He is unable to do anything excejxt hobble around on cratches and the doctor believes ft will be a long (time before he can' work. Luiffifcr'a wife, (untrained, Un skilled, and mentally alow, tried desperately to get work but iwae unable to earn empkiyment. They live alone to a 'email apart- . There will be a t. U'-1 ..'. ;', Saturday, February 24, tit 7. J oVloek ait the Mkl.e Foik E.-p-tiat Giuiaxih, four: miles north of Hilars BUI on UurnsvLUe Highway. All' aingiera and ithe public toe cordially Invited to attend. V7 'AVY0U Gillotttc St40tBlUE,BlAPB ooutu won oouau konomy 15forM-9 W CnibAv 10forC34 NTS All OIlllTII RAZOIS meat. With no income and no prospect of work for either of ithem. ithe situation becatne in creasingly difficult. , When a ease- worker from ithe county depart ment of public welfare visited them, the electoic ourremlt had been cut off, which mdant that the stove and refrigerator would operate, and there were no lights. , Luther's outlook was a gloomy one. The doctor had told him not toworry, but he and his wife were faced with, hospital and doctor biilils, creditors (pushing! them for (payments on the mod- ; est furniture ithey were buying, and not money ito buy food, pay This has nothing to do with rent, of keep ithe utilities dm, op- 'our conduct. God did at Samoti- oration. 'ficatkm becina with Hihi Thii The county department of nub-jpaul could write to even (the care- lie weMlare authorized a monthly I girrlt for ftflim under ithe program t Tl ri Y n Iff A Tin of aid to 4 permanently and to- Itl fl I ll K V af sv k e-w MM . "AN OLD FASHIONED ' DOCTRINE" - How many . there are whose hearts would be thrilled if they understood the old fashioned Bi ble doctrine of sanctificationl Sanctafikaitioa is not a negative matter: donU do this and don't do 'that. It as ralher the positive truth ithlait God waruta us for Horn sea as a sacred possession, much a - bridegroom considers his bride his very own in a special, sacred way. Bible sanotification is a two fold truth, affecting both our standing before God and our spir itual state. In one sense every true believer in Christ has already been sanctified, or consecrated to God, by the operation of the Holy Spirit. Thus we read: ' - "... God hath front the begin ning chosen you to eaavatrion, THROUGH SAN0TIFICAT10N OF THE SPIRIT . . ." (II Thes. 2:13). "Elect aocanding to the foreknowledge of God the Father, THROUGH SANiCTIFICATION OF THE SPIRIT ..." (I Pet 1:2). 1 ; ,rjn,rinflih,i.n : boldeveMi and & y: "Ye ARE samcttfiled" (I Cor. 6:11; of. Ada 20:32; 26:18). This of Muwtif ication based on the TedienxptAve work of 'Christ in our behalf, for HeV 10:10 says "We are sanobified througTh the offering of the body of ., Jesus Chrtist once for all." But now God would apipreolaite this fact and conduct oiurselvea accordingly, consteorait ing ourselves ever more complete ly to Him.'AThta is practical, pro gressive aajnatafScation. "For thia fa the wM of God, even your sane tif ication'' (I Thes. 4:3). Hence Paul's Itenedfiotfon: ."Hhe very God of peace sanctify your whol ly (I Thes. 6:23), md W exlnor- tation to Timothy to oe "a vessel unto honor, sanctified, and meet (fit) for the Master's "use" (H Tim. 2:21). How can believers be more wholly sanatAfded to God In their practical experience? By sftudyfiing and meditating on His Word. Our Lord prayed; "Sanctify them through Thy: truth: Thy Word is broth", (John 17:17) and iPaul de irea rthat Christ "' loved the DVunvh fcm Vmim Himself for it that He might sanctify and cleanse it with THE WASHING OF WATER BY THE WORD" Eph. 6:26,26). tally disabled, which wddl be con- of Public Welfare, SMeigfa. q q I a In Order That The Public Can Shop On FRIDAY NIGHTS, we will remain ppen . until 8:30 o'clock. THIS FRIDAY NIGHT'S SPECIALS Spred-Satin PAINT (Inside) Resrular $6.49 Friday Night $4.95 TRANSISTOR RADIOS Regr. $ 9.95 Friday Night . . . $ 5.95 Reg. $14.95 Friday Night . . . . $10.95 i: -. -? .y ;y :? r--". ' "" . - 7'- v :- ' , .'V DINETTE SETS (7-Piece) Reg. $89.95 Friday Night 39.95 10 OFF c;i Cxi2 ,r.ioHAvi: carpets iwnuea aniDit ne oaa want again, i rTTTrT VTT a mm This is jowt one of the 11 II 111 I 111 If W A I hiR niAM HhiuA IMMnn ll n n .ii lulliurf : aaava wiwiui utq vnm ucufm itftirougih aid to itSie" permanently and totiailly disabled. Fortunaite- ly .this man may be able to work I In 1961 ithe county agents of- im time. lUntil then, ithe monthly f ice, in cooperatian with the conn grant he is receiving', although ty schools, conducted a survey on insuffioienit to pay his bills and the number of rural faaniKes with teke care of all bis needs, will running water in ithe house. The certainly tide Ham and his wffie results of this survey snow that over a most drifffioulit situation.., 88 per cent of our mrel farm ; A leaflet explaining tlhe, pro- homes do not have cunning ffla gram of add to the permanently tor.. This imposes a gr0it hitrd- and .totally disabled is available rfiip on the housewife, who has to at your - county department of carry ithfa waiter. The average public welfare or (the State Board family requires one hour per day to carry this water. This means 80 hours per nmntbh, or 866 hours per year. This means Uhat over 50 tons of waiter must be moved for ithe average household. In ad dition to 'the housewife waJUflta many miles per year. ' ' I 'Nothing . would mean more to the beoith, bapdoeas and , tentment of these families Aan rxuindng water would do. In many cases the cost of getting running water m these homes is not large. For example: By using s sink al ready on the farm and plastic (pipe, one tenant family put run ning cold water in ithe kitchen for 110.80. s I . There can be no better project for a family to do, this year, than that; of putting ruming: water in the home. Singing At Caney Fork Baptist Church On Saturday Night The regular 4th Saturday night singing v will be held! Saturday plight, February . 24, at 7:80 o' clock at the Camiey Fork iBaptiat Church on LitUe Pine Oeek. - All singers and the public tore invited to attend. Laws Cited By Raymond Ramsey Before yon (take your boat out for a epdn on North Carolina wa ters, be sure that everything a board, including the cerrtificaite of registration, is in proper legal or der. s ' GETTING HIS first check for not growing corn this year was G. B. Roberta of Barnard, who accepted his advance payment from Mrs. Anna Mae Tipton, feed grain clerk of the ASCS office in Marshall. Farmers who promise to take corn acreage out of production in 1962 receive payments of some ?33 to $40 per acre. Approximately half is made in advance payments. The remainder will be paid next fall when it is determined that the farmer actually has not produced the com modity. The payments are made under the federal government's feed grain program to reduce surpluses. t. MEDITATION Tha WorMa Mod Widely Uwd Devotional Guide Raymond Ramsey, wildWe pro tector in iMladwon County, -Crji Upper Uocnt- O IW W BOOM. NMNVlUa TRWOHI Read John i:l-S0 8 "Come, tee a man who told rne all that I ever did. Can thit be ed Ithait ail Tarheel ; boatowners tL chritf". fJoh i:tt RSVA Should keep abreast of etlaite and t federal boating; laws. , f lUurmg a campaign of evange- oam an ssweaen, a coy vtmoeti one Ramsey sand that carbow . to- rfejudB of the same age to trachloride fdre etdrMhere and ffyg,, fa. fit time to hie others of the : tojde ; vapwflztng- fa , chriat Aflterw(aird he Kquid toipeauobasicWorobTomome- tostjmony; "I haw been hanetwonger . approvabto m Cbristiani for four equipment Jamuary now f 0r the first time Half Feed Grain Payment Dill Soon De Available The, ,U,vS. 3 n Ll To Our Madison County Friends - When Coming To -Or Leaving Asheville ' Stop Here For Your 1 MEALS o Businessmen's Lunches 85c TRY OUR Delicious Steaks Regular r.Icals Chert Orders GRACE regtauiiakt 8C3 Jlorr' -n Ave. Ncivni A:::zviLLn Ouaird iwiCWtrew w u u ..n approval ol this eoJfflrsnent t ef- j We do not ddscover bow won feotive December; 6, 1958, but l-;derj)ul it is to be a iChristian un lowed use of these ertinguishers ta ,W9 heg te oatl forth until January 1 of thto lyear fa . aw nt are order itha boatmen could replace 0,1 Cod'e riches which are them with approved foam, carbon cbriat, Ailj, 43 dfime Has rich dkaide or dry chemical lypes. M roe there to be possessed, but Ramsey . alao reminded boat- a q ireallxe it. When we owners that only Ooast Guard ap- ffa other of our djaith, provai tifewBvioig-dwviicw would bsi(WBt fcecomea more important to considered as lesM eouipmenit ever before, for fle adds Ltfesaving eouipmerit that cannot our faith when we share be Coast Guard approved will not satisfy legal . reoiirements, and s will be dealt with aooordmgly. . reait 'weeBunge are so oe For their own aftoy," Ramsey found dn eharfcig our taWrt to 000 said, 'Iboatere must obtain approv- in iChraat witirt ouners. lmus we ed lifesaivdng devices, and cita- pread the good news to those tkms will be issued for using im- who need to (hear the gospel .. proper lifesavfoig equipment." I --Prayer: 0 Lord, help me this otw) laws are ex- day not to put my lamp under a pUot about bo'-uauimm:ami-';'---fm sey added, land cittortdons will be Thy name and epread the got issued to operators of improperly pel For the take of Christ, who numbered boatevf The number as-: bvet all mankind, and taught u$ signed to the boat and no otBuer to pray, "Our Father who art aiia.11 mofinitrfikrll An ftT ierhrtAalaVl TJO heaven ... . Amen." the bow amd must be ctottinicitly visible and dearly legible. The letters and numerals must be of plain block design, not less than ithree inches high, and of a color whkfc wiH disbinatly contrast with the backeiroucid. White letters land murmbers bordered , in Uaok don't oualiify when used on a light ootared ibackarouind. If these bordered letters and numbers are tised on dank backgrounds, the Sigthit-colored, visible parftiani must be at least three inches hagn. . : "Also, between 'the prefix, the mvneraib Ismd the sufifix Ithe law requires a hyphen or a space equal to a letter or numeral other than 1 or I," added Kaimsey. "Bnforcemient officers will be watdhing for complianice wWh all these requiremontts wliJh- maike mtia-boaiting safer, snore pkiasamt ai J more or.k-dy," he said. . 1: p Thought for the Day: The more you share the gospel with others, the more you receive for yourself and others. Karl Erik ! Hellberg (Sweden) LITTLE LAUREL MRS. HERSHELL FRANKLIN . Correspondent Rev. J. A. Griffin will preach at Brigman Chapel iSaturday, Feb. 24. Everyone is dnvited. , Our Sunday School is facreas ing nicely at Brigman idiapeL - We are sorry to btove Mrs. Os car Williams on the sick list We wish her a Bpeedy recovery. Mr. and Mrs. Gail Goanell and family attended the funeral of hia brother, Johranie Goanell at Livef Hlil Sin) Greeneville, Term., T! 'it? by afternoon. r T! a xl'.'lng Kr. and' Mrs. Oa CAT V. .....--MIS' r.un'.iiy wuivomoMMi, Up to half of the payment to be earned on a farm under the 1962 feed grain program will be avail able as Boon as the producer signs up (under the program, Eimory Robinson, Chairman, County Ag ricultural Stabtliaaitdon and Cow- servation Committee, said today. He pointed out that this program provision ehould be of substantial benefit to growers who can use some extra ready cash during t ne spring planting season. The feed grain program offers payments to com and tgmam ore- hum producers who divert acreage firom the 1962 production of (these crops to e ; aedkonserving V use. While ithe program is voluntary, farmers who grow corn and grain sorghum; must ooperote bjf divert ing at least a minimum acreage to order to be eligible for price up port on the normal production of tlteir 1962 crop corn and rfc sorghum acreage, end also on any of the other feed grains oats and 'rye." vlv-V '-''V' M The Chairman explained that payments under the feed grain program will be im the f onrrv of negotiable certificaitee, which may be redeemed in dash. Each county will have two county average rates of payment per acre for corn- and two for grain sorghum. One rate will be based on 60 per cent, 1 of the county normal yield per more times ithe county support rate. Farm payment rates will "vary ac cording to t!he faoftn's productivity in relation to the county average productivity and the number - of acres diverted. The mmknum acreage for ' di version from either corn or grain sorghum or bod!a will be figured from the "farm base" determ ined from the total acreage on (he farm used m producing these two crops in 1960 and I960. The minimum reduction Is 20 pet cent of the base, end the meximww de. pemds upon the size of the farm base.-, ". ')"v, ' ; Farmers who are interested in parMcatdng A .in ' he 1962 IFeed Grain -Program tare urged to get in touch with the county ASCS office immediately for further in formation. "V Roatina Fork News MRS. HUBERT P ANGLE, Correspondent - There will be ichurch services it Bethel Christian Church Sun day. Everyone invited. Mrs. Ray Roberts visited her daughter, .Mrs. Cecil Pangle, Mon day. 1 - Spencer Rollins visited Mr, and Mrs. Cecil Pangle Monday night. iMr, and Mrs Thomas ' ABdaon were visited over ,fiie week end by IMr, amd Mrs. Dewey Auieoni and children. : Mr. and Mrs. C R. Whitoon of Skyland spent Saturday night with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. (Hubert Pangle. They also visited Mrs. Lucy Parker and Mrs. Dale Balding. . ', Mrs. (Biuena Frdribee, Gary end Stevie, Mrs. Carolina ' Ptaingle and Mr. and Mrs. BUI Shetley visited Mr. and Mrs. Dan Gardin Wed nesday of last week. : Mr. and Mrs. Rube Gunter end boys visited Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Graves Sunday. -Farmers are busy preparing . their tobacco beds. 811 VTe write and Print Your At? GET TtlB MOXCY to help maintain youi family's health satisfy their M.DR' M.D.B.-Minimum Daily Requirements-are the amounts of essential vitamins, as specified in U.S. Food and I Dreg Administration regulations, that are needed every day by the healthy person -vitamins necessary to help prevent avmntoma of deficiency, ' , Make certain every member of your family gets their . M.D.B. with Vigran Squxbb Multi-Vitamins for all the fam ily; For aa little as 3 cents a day, Vigran Capsules provide 125 percent or more of your IJ.D.R. of vitamins A, D, B1, E C and niacinamide. - T t7 were T'r. J il.Irs. iDedrick Fraiiik 1 5 1 60. . ' : -r, Judy, Sir. and !'rs. Ciirl V.'UKajns and dauV Ja:i ho:i end Ererula Kay, - I :" i. " I Cail Cof-mll. - : -" -.i rx::n r , c 1 ' 1 i r 7 - ' !:'.: : ' 1:
The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.)
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Feb. 22, 1962, edition 1
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