' 'OiwJJay Nt&Tictoiy) THURSDAY Ttt I . iin (,,JGE.;FpURr(Secoiid Section) jm watnesvill-e mountaineer SNAP SHOTS IIUFOlfflATIOtH The value of informa tion depends upon where it comes from. When it comes to life insurance, you can de pend on the information you Set from your Jefferson Standard representative. He is a specialist in "Planned Protection" the service that tailors. the plan to fit your in dividual requirements. With out cost to you, your Jeffer son Standard representative Trill be glad to discuss this subject and show you how "Planned Protection" can work for you. Call or write him today. Special Representative Route 2 Wnyiiesville S. E. Connatser U III! tt Buy War Bonds and Stamps By France Gilbert Frazier Staff Writer for a long long time We've wondered why people Do some of the crazy things They do. For instance ! Why will a bald-headed Man pull a few straggly Locks from the lost column And drag them across the Top of his head until It looks like a custard pie Fenced in with slats? And why will a woman With seemingly good sense fepend half a clay and a Tired sales lady's time Buying something witli the Firm intention of bringing Jt back to be exchanged . Or credited.' And .why does a lovely girl Tell her escort to come At eight and then wait until I'.ight before she liven starts the Transformation process" Why does a business man grl His stenographer to call A telephone number to tell The listener to "Please hold the phone" While he holds an executive Session or goes out To lunch or on a trip Or something And then angrily wonders Why the listener has quietly passed away in the interim' Why do friends meeting On the street hold their Conclave right smack dab In the middle of the sidewalk And then throw pitchfork eves At you if you happen to Push just a little as you Wade through the gutter' And WHY (capital letters) Does anybody write such Piffle as this when there Are so many important Things to write about .' MALARIA CHECKED 'm - DAYS WITH "N LIQUID FOR L-V LV MALA RIAL ririrj symptoms Take only as directed God's Promise of a Nation HIGHLIGHTS ON THE SUNDAY SCHOOL LESSON By NEWMAN CAMFBKLL (The International Uniform Lesson on the above topic for July 29 is Genesis 17, IS. the Memory Verse being Genesis 12:2. "I fvill bless thee . . . and be thoi. a blessing.") I ABRAHAM v. tw.-.e name has I heretofore been .spelled Aluam was 99 years old when our lesson today begins. Jle w.is an old man when God appeared to him and said, "I am the mighty God; walk before Me, and be thou perfect." That seems to be expecting a great deal of a man. but that is what true Christians should strive to bv; perfect. Abraham fell on his face before God and the Lord told him that be was to he the father of many nations. "Neither shall thy name lie A brain any more, but Ihv name -hall be Abra ham," addon.: an II, min of the radical leM i . ni I he name JHVH, " ha h i; t : ,m IVrd .Trlio. vah His uiies name vhs tbenee forth to be Sai. di. nei :.;.irnj, as hcrctnloie ai.ai ;u.i!ii;; the sa rred letter. Abraham u a ; to keep the Lord's (ininanl, an,! aeeordmg to this covenant i rrv male child was to he en. mil, i .ed. the infant when be uas ,-iht .lays old Of Sarah, Abraham-, uiie, t he Lord said, "And I will bh a her, and give thee a son .,1.,, ,,i her: and she shall he the mot h, i of nations ; kings of people hall be of her." In his heart. A hi , i hum laughed at this piopheev. a ; Sarah anil be were bolh old In I he previous chapter of i ;en, a ,. I he story of Sarah ami In r ha i idma h leik, 1 la -gar. an Ktsvpl i.ui. i , lold Sarah so much desired a , hdd t ha I she told her husband to have one by Ha gar. which he did Ihd when this child was to be bo i n and named Ishmael. llagai despised her mis tress and tlniiLs. I" came so un pleasant that H.ig.-ir ran away. The Lord tound h, r andermji in the wilderness and seiil het- back to Abraham s Ion!. 1, ing her to submit herself (,, b,i- mistress. There Ishmael was bom. and at this time he ,t, i : wars old. and Abraham was ewi. nlly wry fond of him. Lord Itlcsses Ishinael Abraham ..poK, ,( i his bov, and the Lord piomr , d to hless him ami make a ena! nation from him. "Twelve pi us es shall he be get," the Lord promiaed. "But My covenant will I estab lish with Isaac" which was to be the name of Sarah's son said the Lord. One day Abraham was sitting at the tent door In the heat of the c'ay, when he saw three men ap proaching. Abraham wetjt to meet thein and asked them to s is tent, saying he would have water for them to wash their feet and food for them to refresh themselves. He undoubtedly realized they were not ordinary travelers, but the Lord and two angels. They accepted his hospitality and ate Old food that was pre pared for "hem. Afterwards they asked whv.Te Sarah was. "Behold, in the tent," Abraham answered. Agairi the promise of a child was repeated, and Sarah, hearing it as she stood partly concealed by the tent door, laughed to herself be cause she thought such a thing could not be. "And the Lord said unto Abra ham. Wherefore did Sarah laugh, saying, Shall I of a surety bear a child, which am old ? "Is anything too hard fo- the Lord?" Sarah denied she had laughed, being frightened. Threaten to Destroy Cities The men then rose and looked toward the cities of Sodom and Gomorrah and the Lord said they were wicked cities and He was going to see if they really were as wicked as had been reported. Abraham went with them as the Lord had said, "Shall I hide from Abraham that thing which I do?" Lot, Abraham's kinsman, lived in or near Sodom, you remember, but Abraham did not mention him when he asked the Lord, "Wilt Thou destroy the righteous with the wicked?" Suppose, he said, that fifty righteous persons should be found. The Lord said He would spare the city for the sake of the 50. Asking forbearance of the Lord for his boldness, but without fear, five more times Abraham Inter ceded for the few righteous per sons who might live in these cities. If there were 45 good, or 40, 30, 20, even 10, would they perish with the guilty? No, said the Lord, if there were but 10 guilt less ones the city would be spared. "And the Lord went His way, as soon as He had left communing with Abraham; and Abraham re turned to his place." In U ibulril by King Features Syndicate. Inc. SJia.VttoWSil Dr. If. M. Clarvoe GINIJiM, PRACTICE l! IIKIWKY MKDICINK AND Sl'ltUHKY Of i 1(1, i-honk :i.t RESIDENCE PHONE H-S8 Ol lit 1. DEPOT STREET INCREASE fOOR MTISfAClOW 6T DIPENOIN6 ON f WHAT veil von pn ) " v 1 UICM S, , r ... ' ' II I & fef UNDERWOOD'S More GRADE A Milk Producers Needed To Fill Ever Increasing Demand For PET PASTEURIZED MILK We Are Paying Top Milk Prices Pet Dairy Phone 10 'roducts Go. Waynesville, N. C. Reclassifications For Past Week Listed By Board Among the thirty-six men re classified during the past week by the local draft board were the following in class 1-A, subject to call for active duty: Floyd Ed ward Rathbone, William Theodore DeWaae, James Ellis McMahan and Carroll Lee Smathers. 'Placed in class 2-A were: Lloyd Bradley, and Ralph Shoe Kuvken- dall. Placed in class 4-F were: Romda Daton Henderson, Max C. Witt, Mack Arnold Garland, Robert Fields Haynes, George Clifford Styles, Noble Jonas Wyatt, and Roy Wallace Green. Placed in class 2-C iF were: Jack G. Rector and Jack R. Fer guson. Placed in class 1-C (inducted) Pfc. James R. Wright Reports To Kelley Field Private First Class .lames H. Wright has recently returned to Kelley Field, Tex., after spending a 30-day furlough with friet.ds and relatives in Waynesville, Sylva and Norfolk, Va. He has returned to the States after 13 months spent in Italy. were: Spencer Walker. Elmer D. Hendrix, Angus M. Best, James D. Kellet, R. L. Ledford, Bob Rog ers. Roy E. Arrington, and Frank Bolden. Continued in class 2-A (Fi were James Davis Smith and Edgar Lon Ammons. Continued in class 2-B were: Herman Ervin Lowe, Edward Earl Messer, Oscar Teasttr. Virgil Oliver Sizemore, Woodrow Wilson Beasley, William Dacus Pitts. Vir gil Cecil Lee and, Gay Wilson Manus. Continued in class 2-B ' K were Roy Fate Sherrill, Robert Lee Da vis and James Edgar Moore Continued in class 2-C ' K i was Jarvis Dewey Messer. Miss Ethel Wright has returned to Baltimore, Md., after spending two weeks with friends and rela tives in Norfolk and Waynesville. FOF . TAXI CALL SCOTT REEVES Phone 90 Pure Oil Station SERVICE LIGHTERS By dunhill S,,KI.. WHATNOTS FIGURINES l'.(,K ,VK ivu, . ' .ml IVIlltM RFAI1 Wl-.KU ihlt,. ... "cl .......... .. ii i m; HI AhhST, DAVIS-SMITH (Jewelers Since IKli:, Our Complete Stock 11 Church Street 0M,. , ,(si,IH, rlnihcn Rolled Off The Assembly Line July 3ij ?v jrwr - - Wtf t v ... nils ' ? sr.' 1 ssT.r.'.-.'rfHfi 4 if it , . THE 1946 MODEL FORD IHI146 MODOMERCUIY Here Are Pictures of the 1946 FORD Lin (1) Ford Will Fads About Ford Build 40,000 Cars In 1945, Plans (2) The 1946 Ford Is Not A "Stop-Gap" Model, But T Result Of Four Years Of Research, (3) Outstanding Features Are: (a) A More Powerful Engine (b) Better Performance (c) Longer Life (d) Improved Economy (e) Better Ride Ford Is To Eventually Produce Six Super Deluxe liody Styles ami Three Deluxe Styles. The 19-40 l-oi.l l-N " " wjrut-u... ui,mo, iu-w neanngs, lusuri ng Longer Engine Life; New System of Em,'""' lllu" Keeping Oil Cleaner Longer; Widespread Use of Synthetic Rubber, Which Resists Grease, Vf V mm m M m We Will Have lH4b Fnrrk nnri Morrnruc In flnr Chnur MOO h Soon As Available DAY N R Phone 52 T7 jf. 1U 10 Authorized Ford Dealers i A Waynesv

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view