Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / July 5, 1945, edition 1 / Page 4
Part of The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
(Ott! Day BR&eV Victory) THURSDAY, THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER Promoted to 'MAJ ILAFF-A-DAYS Library Notes CONSULT Um DK. K. KING HARPE OPTOMETRIST 125 Main Street Well, nidir. Man's Failures and Godfs Promises HIGHLIGHTS ON THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON DAVIS-SMITI? MARGARET JOHNSTON County Librarian It is with pride and pleasure that we announce the award of the t'ildecott Medal lo Elizabeth Orton Jones for her illustrations in "l'ray er for a Child." by Rachel Field. This award is niven annually for the most distinguished picture book of the year. A copy of tins hook may be found m (he Children's De partment of oiu' own county li brary. Elizabeth Ortnn .luncs lives in Highland Park. 111., where she w.is born. She was graduated from the llniversity of Chicago and studied at the Art Institute in that city. Later she went lo France where she was graduated from the Ecole des Beaux Arts u Fnntainebleau and had the .expert instruction ol the artist. I.isusu in Paris. Color prints of children are a specialty of Miss Jones, and shir Jyas worked out for herself an in dividual technique of etching. She had her own little studio press, Which is usually deluged with or ders from art dealers all over the country. In addition to etching, Miss Jones works in water colors and murals She has had many distinguished exhibits and awards since the beginning of her career Among her books ars: "Ragman of Paris," "David Maminka's Chil dren," "Twig," all of which she wrote and illustrated herself She has done pictures for "The Srarlet Oak," by Cornelia Meigs; "Told Under the Magic Umbrella." nd the latest. "Prayer for a Child." I by Rachel Field. NEW MEMORIAL HOOKS i Among the newly placed memor ial books in the county library arc: "The Tar Heel Editor" by Josephus Daniels in memory of James At kins, Jr., by his family; and "Christ and the Fine Arts," by C. P. Mans, ih memory of Miss Jessie Josephine Herren by her sister, Mrs. Eucile Herren Kov. ' "Swam f) ' '-I Op IQjy k.i- lttut VKisJLiA "You bet I always do as Mom tells me so does Popr I TOWN and: FARM raportdW OFFICS Of WAt tNFOIMATlON t ( 1V11IANS AT WAR The Oovenmienl needs and asks ils citizens in the l!37tli week he war against Japan tn; 1 Sign up lor al least one voyage on a merchant ship bringing iers home from Europe, if you are a eompetant chef, butcher, or r Sea experience is unnecessary. Wire collect. Merchant Ma- Washlngton 2,"). I). C. 1 t Mini nut nit :ill I li friJi iti:ii'h( vnll cm Thrv may he only plentiful fruit crop this summer, and commercially canned s will coul nine scare next, winter. However. asK lor no more nng sugar than you will actually use. lly laKing only your lair e, you will help make the short supply go round. X. Enlist your Shepherd, Schnauzer, Pinscher. or farm Collie in the Army K-f) Corps The need is urgent for scout dogs to Jap snipers and save American lives. Write or wire Quarter- er General, Washington 25. D. C. ni t sold bake rine tlu fruit cam shai dog spot mast FOR . . . TAXI CALL SCOTT REEVES Phone 90 Pure Oil Station REMINDERS MEATS. FATS Med Stamps K2 through l'2 Red Stamps Q2 through V2 lied Stamps V2 through 12 Ited Stamps Al through El 1 PROCESSED FOODS- Blue Stamps T2 through X2 I Mine Stamps Y2. 7.2. Al. HI. CI , Blue Stamps 1)1 through HI Blue Stamps .11 through Nl SUGAR STAMPS - 'M FUEL OIL Period I. 2. H. 4. and 5 coupons, goods for ten gallons 1 per unit, continue valid throughout the country for the rest of the heating year. New Period 1 coupon in the 1945-46 ration may be used anytime after June 1. j SHOES Airplanes Stamps Nos. 1. 2. 3, in Hook Three continue valid I indefinitely. Last Datf I or Use July 31 August 31 September 30 October 31 July 31 August 31 September 30 October 31 August 31 GOODY EAR tad tal SPECIALS $3.00 siofto For any turn-in truck tire from 6.50-20 through 8.25 20 on NEW GOODYEAR Truck Tire. For your turn-in tire on any size NEW GOOD YEAR Passenger Tire. If You Need Tires, See Us Before You Buy Sims Tire and Battery Co. Main Street ED SIMS, Owner Waynesville, N. C. . f-W tft&Qx ? JAMES LENWOOD ROGERS, son of Mr. and Mrs. Nath Rogers, of Waynesville, R.F.D. No. 2, and husband of Mrs. Ruth Trull Rog ers, has recently been promoted from staff sergeant to first ser geant, according to information re ceived by his wife. Sgt. Rogers has been in the ser vice since November 7, 1941, and has spent the past year in the European theatre. He was in ducted at Fort Bragg and prior to being sent overseas he had train ing at Fort George Meade, Md., Camp Battle, New Bern, Camp Burner, Summitt, Md., Camp Ash ley, Va. He is attached to the coast artillery. He is at present serving at Moorburg, Germany, with the Third Army, and has written that he will be stationed there for sometime. When he entered the service he was em ployed by the Wellco Shoe Corporation. Pfc. Robert C. McGaha Arrives From Overseas Private First Class Robert C. McGaha. son of Mr. and Mrs. I. B. McGaha, of Plott's Creek, and husband of the former Miss Dor othy Mull, has arrived home for a furlough after 22 months spent in the Pacific theatre. He has served in Australia, New Guinea. Admir alty Islands, and later In the Philippines. He entered the service in Sep tember, 1942, and was inducted at Camp Croft. Before being sent overseas he had further training al Camp Hulen, Tex., and Camp Cook, Calif. At the time he entered the ser vice he was employed by the West Mining Company. His brother, Claude Richard McGaha, who was serving in the Navy, has been hon orably discharged from the service. Pinkney L. Turbyfill, of Elmer, N. J., has arrived to spend a couple of weeks here with his sister, Mrs. O. R. Martin. He is employed by the Deerficld Packing Corporation. Mr. Turbyfill was formerly employ ed by the Waynesville Mountaineer. YOU'RE NOT TOO OLD TO FEEL YOUNG Tbls i. a message fur men who have known life but no longer find tt thrilling because- ol the lark of certain vitamins and bonnoneg. Tromone. a recent medical discovery combin ing vitamins and bonnonea maj multiply th. vim and sest and enjoyment you once knew. Your whole approach, your whole attitude to ward life, may improve when you. beirto to use Tromone. Now It may be possible (or middle aired men to again enjoy the same spirit, vitality and pleasures that made their vouth a thing to remember. Added yean may not subtract from your pleasures whsn you use Tromone. tbe new medical formula combining vitamins and hormones. Follow directions on label. Tromone for Sal. by Smith's Cut-Rate Drug Store And Druggists Everywhere ADMINISTRATRIX NOTICE Having qualified as administra trix of the. estate of Harry Rotha. Sr., deceased, late of Haywood County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against th estate of the said Harry Rotha, Sr., deceased, to exhibit same to the undersigned adminis tratrix in Waynesville, N. C, on or before the 21st day of June. 1946, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recorvery. All per sons indebted to said estate will please make immediate settlement. This June 14, 1945. GEORGIA K. ROTHA, Administratrix, estate of Harry Rotha, Sr., deceased. 1443-Wune 21-28 July 5-12-19-26 NOTICE OF TRUSTEE'S SALE On Monday, July 9th, 1945, at eleven o'clock, A. M., at the court house door in the Town of Way nesville, N. C, I will offer for sale at public outcry to the high est bidder for cash, the following described real estate situate in said Town and State, to-wlt: Being Lot No. 76 of Grand View Sub-Division in the Town of Way nesville, as per plat recorded in the Office of the Register of Deeds of Haywood County. Sale made pursuant to power and authority conferred upon me by that certain Deed of Trust dat ed July 14, 1943, executed by R. H. Clark and wife, Gertrude P. Clark and recorded in Book 52, uage 115, Haywood County Regis try, to which Deed of Trust and record reference is hereby made for all the terms and conditions thereof; and also pursuant to Or der of Resale made by the Clerk of the Superior Court of Haywood County, June 22, 1943. This 22nd day of June, 1943. A. T. WARD, Trustee. No. 1448 June 28-July 8 By NEWMAN CAMPBELL (The International Uniform Lesson on the above topic for July 8 is Genesis 3-9, the Memory Verse being Genesis 8:22, "While the earth remalneth, seedtime and harvest, and cold and heat, and summer and winter, and day and night shall not cease.") THE THIRD chapter of Genesis begins the tale of man's failure to live according to the word of God. Placed in the beautiful Garden of Eden, with everything imaginable to make life happy and worth while, still Adam and Eve sinned. The serpent, we are told, was the most "subtil" beast in the world. Seeing Eve by herself, he asked her if it was true that they were not to eat of every tree in the garden. They could partake of the fruits of all but one, Eve re plied, and of that God had said, "Ye shall not eat of it, neither shall ye touch it, lest ye die." The serpent assured her that there was no reason in the world why they should not enjoy this tree, too, and at last Eve tasted the fruit, found.it good, and as Adam came, she gave him some and he, too, ate it. At once they realized that they had sinned. What had seemed very natural and proper before, now seemeu wrung, uuu mey juauc garments of fig leaves sewed to gether to cover themselves. That evening, they heard the voice of God walking in the garden in the cool of the day, and Adam and Eve hid from Him. When Adam was called before the Lord he said he had been hiding for he realized that he was naked. By this answer God knew that they had disobeyed Him and He pronounced sentence upon them. Serpent Is Punished The serpent was to crawl upon his belly thereafter and he and man would be enemies. Adam and Eve were banished from their lovely home. Adam was to work hard to make a living. "In Die sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread," said the Lord. "In sorrow shall thou bring forth children," , Eve was told, and so is recorded the first sin and its punishment. , The next sin? Adam and Eve had two sons named Cain and '. Abel. Cain was jealous of his j younger brother because Abel's sacrifice to the Lord had been re I spected and his had not. Meeting 1 his brother one day, in a fit of en ! vious rage, he killed him, and the ; Lord sentenced him to become a I wanderer upon the face of the earth. Cain mourned. "My pun isment is greater than I can bear." Then follows the description of U.e civilization following Cain's residence in the land of Nod and his descendants. Enoch was his ficst son and Cain bullded a city which he named for Enoch. Jabal, a descendant, was the "father of such aa dwell in tents and of such as have cattle." His brother, Ju bal, was the father of all who han dle the harp and organ. A half brother was Instructor of every artificer in brass and iron. Eve bore another 'on and his name was Seth, and other sons and daughters were born to Adam after Seth. Ninth in the succession from Adam was Noah, who was a man of God. By this time when men had begun to multiply, they became very lawless, "And it re pented the Lord that He had made man on the earth, and it grieved Him at heart." Decides to Destroy Living Things The Lord said, "I will destroy man whom I have created from the face of the earth; both man, and beast, and the creeping things, and the owls of the air." Noah had three sons, Shem. Ham and Japheth, and God told Noah Ao build an ark and to take on it his wife, his sons and their families, and two of every living creature upon the earth, male and female. Noah did so, and the rains descended and the floods came and beat upon the face of the earth for 40 days and 40 nights, and every living thing outside of the ark per ished. The water continued to rise for 110 days more, making 150 days in all. The ark finally came to rest on Mt. Ararat, and "Noah went forth, and his sons, and his wife, and hia sons' wives with him." Noah builded an altar there and sacrificed upon it the first men tion of an altar erected to God in the Bible. "And Jehovah smelled the sweet savor; and Jehovah said in His heart, I will not again curse the ground any more for man's sake; for the imagination of man's heart is evil from his youth; neither will I again smite any more every thing living, as I have done. T "While ' the " earth remalneth, seedtime and harvest, and cold and heat, and summer and win ter, and day and night shall not cease." And He made a covenant with Noah and put a rainbow in the sky as token that there would be no more floods like this one. Dlstrlhnt , hy King Features Syndicate, Inc. Expert Watch and Jew.,v Complete Stock 8 Church .Street l.'llrin.J i PARK TH EA WAYNESVILLE. N OK I'll liM ,NA MATIN KE: Sunday and I P. V s:.f....j - "i urn mrllttm i1llf1l. T I tfc . iMtitii biiwh: ( nnii t ,., Sunday ADMISSION: Children Under 1 Years. ''y Seats, ;i5c TAX: On Children's Pass, y THURSDAY Jl l.Y "The Horn Blows At MidniJ Yilh Jack Henny and Alexis Smith FRIDAY JULY "The Man In Half Moon StrJ With Nils Asther and Helen Walker. SATURDAY JULY 7 "Law Of The Valley" With Johnny Mack Drown and Kavniund W LATE SHOW I0:;i p. m, "Rough. Tough and Read Starring Chester Morris and Victor McLaul SUNDAY JULY s "Mollie and Me" With (uaeie Fields, Monty Woolley and Md' MONDAY-TUESDAY .ll'I.Y !M "Where Do We Go From He With Fred, MacMnrray. Joan Leslie and Junef WEDNESDAY Jl l.Y 11 "Faces In The Fog'' Starring Jane Withers and Paul Kelly Report Of Condition Of The First National. .Ban Of Waynesville, North Caiohna Al The Close Of Business On June 30. 1945 ASSETS Ca&h and Due from Banks $1,701,386.7 U. S. Roods 2,U7L000.O0 N. C. and other State Bonds 107,800.00 County and Municipal Bonds of N. ('. 178,500.00 LIABILITIES Capita! Stock J r.o.oooo" Surplus ;.n.(oiw" Undivided Piolits 10-1.4 1-'" Reserve (or Contingencies (." "" Total Cash and Bonds $4,359,636.76 Federal Reserve Bank Stock 3.000.00 Loans and Discounts 933,608.39 Banking House 4,500.00 Furniture and Fixtures 7,000.00 Other Real Estate 2.00 TOTAL ASSETS $5,307,797.15 Member F'ederal Reserve System Total Capita! Funds War Loan Account Deposits j $;..!l1"'' TOTAL LIABILITIES Member Federal Deposit Insurnwe U'rP mi The Friendly Bank Organized 1902
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
July 5, 1945, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75