THE DUPLI M TIMES : ?
ruiiUahed aeh Friday la Kenansrllle. I. C County Seat of
" ' DUPLIN COUNTY i '.7
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Editorial bnelneas and printing plant, Kenaaarllle, N. C.
v ; J. ROBERT GRADY, EDITOR OWNER J
Entered at the Post Offloe, Kenansville, N. C.. '
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' I"" TELEPHONES V ,
' KenansTlUe. 87-7 Warsaw 3SS-6 :
f SUBSCRIPTION BATES: $3.00 par year in Duplin County;
$8.56 per year year outside Duplin County, in North Carolina;
" $4.00 per year outside North Carolina, except to Men In U. S.
Araed rorcee, Anywhere, $3.00 per year.
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Advertlslnr rates furnished on request.
A Demoeratie Journal, devoted to the material, educational, '
economics and agricultural Interests of Duplin County.
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Mew York Ckkof
AT HOME
ON THE FARM
, r With The City Cousin
"His entire life was spent in the
rural community where he was
.... This was said of Bill Tyree, dirt
farmer, In his piain and simple
obituary that came out in the ccun
' tv Seat weekly newspaper shortly
after he died.
- i had read this line1 in more than
one account of the passing' of a
friend.' IMs part of the stock in
trade of men everywhere who
write for ' "the hometown paper."
Close to the soil themselves, .in
small towns that depend on the
outlying, farm sections for their
very existence, country editors
' have a keen" awareness of the real
t meaning behind the un-adorned
mmary of Bill Tyree's crowded
WHEN YOU
f'-mH, ;. ....
F; uiir illi r e
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Paints, Varnishes, Brushes,
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Grade "A"
CONCRETE AND
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iii)
MLom
'-y-'"
JBC' I
larimna w i
iAr "
0troH rlkrflpM
lifetime.
City cousins who take the trou
ble to read the obituary of a far
mer they have not known in life,
conclude that men like Bill were
old "stick-in-the-muds" whose ex
istence must have been terribly
dull. But I knew Bill. Because he
was strong enough to stick it out,
some folks get the idea that he was
too weak to move on to the "green
er pastures" that are kinda like the
end of the rainbow.
Bill saw good times and bad
times find their way to his farm
stead, but he knew how to handle
them. I've seen him prosper, and
I've seen him paying up his news
paper subscription with bags of po
tatoes and Leghorn hens. Some
times he had to pay the doctor and
the parson with this same legal
tender, but Bill Tyree could be
counted upon to "pay in full."
How 'many "Bill Tyrees" do we
have in North Carolina? Well, look
at your small rural communities.
Search out the school, the church,
NEED -
KENANSVILLE, N. C.
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Steam Cyr
V:-rr.:,t!.C.
SUNDAY
SCHOOL
Uniform it'.
bttirnattottat
Slesson--
By HAROLD I.: LUNDQU1ST, D. D. '
Ol Tha Moody Bibla. Institute of Chicago.
Relaassd by Western Newspaper Union.
LESSON FOR MARCH 2
Lesson subjects and Scripture texts se
lected and copyrighted by International
Council of Religious Educations used by
permission. v '
JESU8 SUMS CP HIS CLAIMS
LESSON TEXT John 12: IMS. 10-32.
MEMORY SELECTION And 1 if I
be lifted up from the earth, will draw all
men unto me. John 12:32.
The last week of our Lord's min
istry on earth comes before us to
day as we consider two events one
of which occurred on Sunday and
the other on Tuesday. One sees here
the attitude of men toward Christ,
of God toward men, of the Father
toward the Son, and the majestic
drawing power of the Saviour.
I. Believing; Men Honor Christ
w. 12-16).
God says, "Him that offereth
praise glorifleth me" (Pi. 50:23),
and the believer recognizes that
"praise is comely for the upright"
(Ps. 53:1). Jesus Is entirely worthy
of the praise of every heart and
voica.
Presenting himself as their Mes
siah, Jesus received the enthusiastic
acclaim of his disciples and friends,
who were probably joined by others
drawn by the excitement
The Pharisees did not join in (see
Luke 19:39, 40), nor did the city, not
even knowing who he was (Matt.
21:10, 11). So it is today; some
love and praise him, some hate him,
others just ignore him. Of which
class are you?
He gave Jerusalem and the na
tion a final opportunity to receive
him. It was not yet too late, but it
was their last chance. Such a time
comes in the life of every one of us.
They rejected him. Do we? ,
But even though some did reject,
let us not forget that there were
those who shouted, "Hosanna"; who
cast their garments down before him
and waved palms of victory and joy.
Thank God for their holy enthusi
asm, Pray God that we may have
a little more -of it.
D. God Honors Men Who Serve
Christ (w. 20-26).
It is good to note that whatever
prompted the coming of the Greeks,
they wanted to see Jesus.
A man has progressed far on the
road to blessing when he makes
known his desire, to see Jesus. Com
ing to him means coming to the
One who has the words of eternal
life.
Note that the disciples were wise
enough to bring the men to Jesus.
The true function of every Christian
worker is to bring then to him.
The reply of our Lord to the
Greeks, and to the disciples who
brought them to him, seems a bit
singular at first glance. Did he not
wish to receive them? They had
probably come to see the great re
ligious leader, the King of the Jews
why did he talk about death?
The words of our Lord are clear.
Men do not need an example, a lead
er, a teacher; they need a Saviour.
It is as a sacrifice for sin that Christ
will draw all men unto himself.
III. The Father Glorifies the Son
(vv. 27-30).
The awful blackness of the bur
den of the world's sins which he was
to bear pressed down upon our Lord
in an agony of soul beyond our
ability to understand. But even his
troubled soul did not turn from the
hour of death for us.
The question of verse 27 is essen
tially this: "Should I ask the Father
to deliver me from this hour? No,
I came to be man's Saviour." He
did not look away, nor wish to turn
back. He knew why he had come,
and iie was faithful even to death
(Phil. 2:8; Heb. 2:9).
He had only one desire that the
name of God the Father should be
glorified (v. 28). Do we who bear
his holy name follow in his foqjr
steps? Do we have an eye single
to his glory or de we seek our own?
Then came the voice from heaven;
the Father had glorified his own
name in the Son, and would do it
again yes, again and again.
Jesus knew the Father would do
it, ha did not need any assurance
(v. 30), but for the sake of the peo
ple the witness was given. Notice
the reaction of the listeners some
recognized that a heavenly mes
sage had been given; others had only
heard some thunder.
May God give us grace to hear
his voice when he speaks, and not
consider it merely the rolling of
some deep voice of thunder!
IV. The Son Draws All Men to
Himself (vv. 81, 32).
Because Christ was lifted up on
the cross and died, there is victory
over sin and death, declared by his
resurrection and ascension to the
Father. ' .'
Satan is still at s liberty in the
world, but he is defeated (John 16:
11). Death still comes, but the sting
is gone for the Christian (I Cor. IS:
88-67). The world is still fighting
our Lord, but he is drawing men to
himself here and there throughout
the world.
One day he will come as King of
kings and Lord of lords, to declare
in Its finality the victory which has
already been won.'i.
We should be reminded anew thkt
it is Christ the Saviour who will
draw men if we will only exalt him
in our preaching and teaching.' Let
us do itl . . ,
the newspaper that serves it. -If
these ' institutions , stand at mm?
there la at least one "EU1 Tyree"
In Drugstores :i
, Results of 7 months' investiga
tion of scales and weights by the
817 drugstores compounding pre
scriptions lh. this State disclosed
that 10 of the stores had no pre
scription scales whatever; nine had
scales regarded as Inadequate, 170
are using "Class B" scales- and
only 607 are using "Class A"
scales, as required by law. .
Commissioner of Agriculture W.
Kerr Scott declared that 1, 959 of
the 15,416 weights tested weke
found to be short - - or approxi
mately 13 percent of the total.
He said that 817, drugstores had
917 prescription scales, 11 of these
being condemned as not giving
fair weight
All the "weights" - - and these
included pieces of wire, pennies,
nickels, and other small objects -which
did not meet with standards
were confiscated.
Scott charged that in many In
stances prescriptions have been
compounded "more or less by
guess," since neither scales nor
USE v
PI NEE
COUGH SYRUP
It's Different
You'll Like It
OUINN - McGOWEN COMPANY
WARSAW, NORTH CAROLINA
OAT PHONE 2-4-t-l
Funeral Directors
n bufr e
SEED POTATOES
Just Arrived, 2 Carloads, Maine Grown U. S. No. l'a.
IRISH COBBLERS, Certified ' S3.5Q 100-lb. Bag
REDBLISS, Select .. . $3.90 100-lb. Bag
BACKYARD GARDENERS:' Buy; as many as you wish, from
a quart to a peck or bag at usual low Roudabush prices.
- ROUDABKSH'S SEED STORE
Wilmington's Oldest Seedhouse
Corner Front & Dock Sts., Wilmington, W. C.
wmmmmmmmm
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Answer ;
Farm Questions
Q. Will pigs Ifia sows thrive on
the same ration? -
-. A. No. What is good for pigs is
not necessarily good for sows. -
Q. What progress was made, in
growing Turkish tobacco in this
state in 1046? v - 1
A. About 50,000 -pounds of this
type leaf was grow, in the moun-
A. J. CAVENAUGH
Wallace, N. C.
' JEWELER
DIAMONDS WATCH E4
WATCH AND JEWELRY
REPAIRING & ENGRAVING
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WHEN YOU NEED
SERVICES OF AN
AUCTIONEER
CALL
BILL HINESJR.
Phone 270-1 262-6
WARSAW, N. C.
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NITK 3-6-6-1
Embalmers
Service -
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crop, or about twice as much as
for burley and Cue-cured types.
Q. What lathe average soybean
yield-per-acre for North Carolina?
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'. A. Present average yields range
from 8 to 13 bushels per acre. :
CRYOSCOPE
: A cryoscope is a specially design
ed machine for testing milk, and is
recognized as official test equip
ment in a majority of the 48 states.
burner & Turiiec
- - insurance ac:::cy - .
"ALL KINDS Or INSUSANOK"
v PINX HILL, N. C.
U O. TURNER, Jr.
nsdt Hill' OUIt
We Cure Meat"
. THE "YEAR AROUND , ,
WE ARE EQUIPPED TO , "
GRIND MEAT " r :
MAKE LARD :
DRESS POULTRY
WE OFFER A COMPLETE PROCESSING AND
LOCKER SERVICE
WE CARRY AT ALL TIMES. . ,
A COMPLETE LINE OF " - .
Frozen Foods, Western Meals v
Dressed Fryers, Hens, Turkeys :
AndGeese a
STOUT FROZftf FOOD LOCKER CO.
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Wiion your cold brings on '
troublesome cough, spend 4a i
any dnift store for a bottle of
LET'S CANADIOL MIXTURE
setting to relieve coughing fast
VbS 9 acts promptly to help k- o
thick, sticky phlegm soothe 1 1
throat membranes and sue hard -lag
spells. So try it the very ( t
a cold results in a wracklner. s a
eough. Find out for yoursoif Ji b-
good It is for coughs due to r t
BUCKLEY'S CANADIOL.' MIX! UKS
made In the U.3.A. TODAY J1 drug
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