? -it Bureau kua, in my opinion, the out standing leadership of tho nation, but we have weakened their influ ence by an Inadequate member ship. North Carolina needs 100,000 Farm Bureau members and they are needed now if we are to main' tain the galas we have made since 1932. - "Farm Bureau gives us a med ium through which we can Insure the future of Agriculture, Let'r not- sell ourselves short at a time when we need most to come thru. If we don't get 100,000 members, the day is near at hand when we will wish that we had.'? "Fredoni Train" Be In Wilmington On December 10 committee named to handle delays of Veterans' participation in He dedication Week Dec. S-10, asked the commissioners for permission to use the Legion stadium on the Wilmington. J Prices for fall and winter a: . a this year are expected to averse about the same as last year. A friend of mine complained that some strangers had bought the house next door to his. . They bad a , strange name, they talked strange ly, they1 looked strange. Ha was tempted to sell his beautiful homo and move to another community, he frowned when I smiled at him. I asked him if he would do what I proposed as ; a solution to bis difficulty. He hesitated. I suggest ed that he out an armful of dahlias from his garden and take them to the Strange neighbors. He did. He discovered that the strange neigh bor was an expert horticulturist. To night of Dec. 6 for a military dis play. Permission was granted - During the day of Dec. 6, the Commissioners were told, the American Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars posts plan to stage a parade and invite prominent speakers to deliver an address. An attempt also will be made to get equipment from Camp Lejeune or Fort Bragg sent to the city. i Mr. Wade extended a cordial in- ' WARSAW AF ft AH LODGE V No. 677 The "Freedom Train" will be parked at the shipyard during its one-day visit , to Wilmington Dec. 10, Jimmy Wade told Duplinites in Warsaw Tuesday. Col. McClelland, appointed by Mayor E. L. White to the special A new method of processing fresh cot green alfalfa promises to open industrial outlets for such alfalfa products as proteins and the pig ments of coloring materials, ac cording to USDA. bod TABLETS attstzxg Cam )ina - AT 7:30. ALL MASTER MASONS ARE INVITED TO ATTNEO. Oil I "'"' uiiilol'm '!'' "' t"Q MEETS EVERY SECOND AND FOURTH TUESDAY NIGHTS SCRIPTURE: I.John 13; John XI: IS- 22 DEVOTIONAL READING: 1 Corln. mans 13. HE DUPLIN TRIES day they are great friends. They love one another. . Follow After Love LI ERE you will need to read I , f , ,The Way of Love . Lesson for November 83, 1947 Dr. Newton OUNDAY'S lesson Is based on the' M writings of Johnf I John 13, and "John 21:15-22. The, devotional read big is First Corinthians 13. Travelling on a v plane at night a lit tle : while ago. I talked at length with a group of business men. The conversation turned at last to the Bible. I asked -the group for their favorite passages in the Bible. They named several passages, . but . the majority -said ' they loved most the writings of John. - I think their , answer emphasizes this truth. John tells us about God and his love. That is the message of this lesson. Tht Happy Way of Life T OVE Is the happy way of life. It is the only happy way of 1 life. .Children are happy to the de gree that they are loved. Find me av home where children are truly , loved, and J will have no difficulty , , in. identifying that as a happy home. Little children-yearn for love, and they respond in love. That is one : reason why they like dogs. Dogs love .little child i en, unless they are' the wrong sort of dogs. And little' ' children love dogs. . , If a. dog can bring happiness to little child by loving to the limit .. of Its ; brute nature, how much more can parents, made In the : Image of God, bring happiness to . . little children bv loving them. Lovi Begets Love JOHN declares, '. "This command- -ment have we from him. that he who loveth God love his , brother also," I John 4:21. - . -'" We cannot hate people if we see them through eyes of love. The Bible somewhere speaks of flie eyes of the heart, and It Is of Mok eyes that I am now think- 1 John 2:741. We need not pass 1 resolutions' about better- relations within nations and between nations unless we are willing to follow after love in the everyday relationships of life. ' Jnst across ' the fenoe, -luit across the hedge. Just across the desk, Jnst across the hall, Just across the way, narrow er wide It niay be. Is a human being who yearns for lore. - It Is generally safe to assume thai the people yon see every day are lonely people. lon may not understand why, but they are lonely. . ; : ; What can you do to help them in their loneliness? That is where the water begins to hit the wheel in ap plying this lesson to -everyday life, i. In the pioneer days of our- coun try, people were more neighborly, because they were aware of great danger danger from Indians,- dan ger from wild-beasts, danger from the wilderness about them. ,v This sense of danger drew them together. Today, with our walled apartments. we have lost some sense of inter-1 dependence. That Is why we are, so lonely. : Follow the. better self ' within you. Penetrate these bar- J f Tiers. . Follow after love, And you will be happier as you make your neighbor happy. The Way of Love y HE way of love is the way of Christ. "A new commandment I give unto you," said Jesus, "That ye love one another as I have loved you." ( , Not antil we reach the point that ' we can look at life through the yes of love the eyes of the heart can we know 1 the Joy which oomes whenwe follow the way of love. It may sound very simple. That Is the reason why It is so vital. It is the one way np and at for our frightened world. The way of love Is the way God wants a to go today and tomorrow. (ConriilM bv tht -f mtarlntleiul Totincil ' l RtltitouM Education- tm araall at 401 Ptotatnanl danominauona Ralaaaat bj WHU Ftatvm) VJ he ilinD yHli r mil imA;pmm K , , ft-"' t t - A v r I - ' ? mm, '- m t xf ' - -'' 7-". of " 'i-' '-y ,' If Mi , '4 f4 f .if' mmmmmi 3D Agriculture Now In Critical Period ; The next 12 months wilj be "the most critical period in the history of American agriculture, because farm legislation and policy to be REMEMBER TODAY . A n T(1VII1kkhw - wun A - PHOTO(iRAPn BV V KRAFT'S , f STUDIO IN MOUNT OLIVE Phones 217-J or 230 COMMERCIAL :;; PHOTOGRAPHY -A SPECIALTY established will determine the fu ture of North Carolina for the com ing decade," Joe R. Williams, Sales Supervisor of the Winston-Salem Tobacco Board of Trade, declared today. "The North Carolina Farm Jl'nvU- "hiii Says I FOn SflLt SASH-DOORS SHEETROCK PAINTS DRAIN TILE TERRA COTTA Pl?l GIASS - lr CEMFN7 - BPICH PLASTER ASPHALT SHiN'GlFS AND All n ' ROIL ROOFINr, Z. J. Carter G Son Wnfface. N. C. vv 1 zh", ",fk f&f'ff- , f-'j .? M ' - - 1 fk' x v , . '' j f2&, ' "J-y, y"-' ' It hi In some parts ol tiie wcarld tfo antics jot an American cheer Jeader would be considered "shockingly undignified." But in our sport-loving land fee cheer-leader is taken for granted. He is a respected leader, commanding thousands in an organized expression of ENCOURAGEMENT. Wise parents, are the "cheer-leaders of the home." Wimout acrobatics, but with the same contagious enthusiasm, they provide the encouragement their children need in scores of vital pursuits. No part of a child's trcaning profits more from parental encour agement, than religious education. A youngsters interest in his moral and spiritual growth can be fostered or destroyed byj the attitude and example of his Dad and Mother. In the spiritual training of our children, the Church does an essential task FOR us. But the Church accomplishes mast when it works WITH us. A child's strongest incentive to character-develop-ment is the example of churchrgoiog; duirch-supporting parents. WW 1 TTf- nffi3!0RCHF0B.flrr Churd, fa v.iai 0di r . 9 Greatest fcuikJintTo Jf 9reaest factor ZT Wuck, neithr r W Ta,ue- With wd your BQ,,e J ' church on : Coivrlfht UiT bor Uiab mamL j(WBt This series of ads is being published each week in the Du plin Times under the auspices of the Duplin County Mini sters and is being sponsored by the following patriotic individuals and business establishments liutom-ndenoe Day u salutes miuvons oi ieuew who buy and own Sst. Ae payroll eaters, the i farmers, prefesslonal i t e polf-employed, the if' . ton's In : , lit -n are ' " '"'f Expert Radiator Repair tovTROTT'S GAUGE 12 Years Experience Beulavflle N. C. G. H. WEST & SON General Merchandise West Siding, N. C. WARSAW ELECTRIC & APPLIANCE COMPANY . H. T. Fisher, Mgr. Contract House Wiring Electrical Appliances . , " JAMES MILLED BeulaviUe, N. C, R F D. , QUINN-MC GOWEN COJIPANY. . Warsaw, i:- C-'""a T. A. TURNER & COMPANY "A Square Deal To All" PinkHUI,N.C. If our Financial Friend . WACCAMAW BANK & TRUST COMPANY Kenansville Rose Hill I. J. SANDLIN CO. General Merchandise . - Phone 213-2 ' - Beulaville, N. C. MCLENDON'S ESSO STATION Unexcelled Service . Phone 2566 Kenansville, N. C. How Are Your Brakes? We Fix Them MATHEWS GARAGE Drum Turning Beulaville, N. C WARSAW FURNITURE CO. "We Furnish The Home" Warsaw, North Carolina . CARROLL & RIGGS Wood Workshop Warsaw, North Carclina Y C '

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