: r 1:- li I .j i 1 1 1 -a THE DUPLIN TIMES FlUUwt each IHday ta Ktauavilto. H. G. Cewifcr Seat ef DUPLIN COTOTT - UHmU kutaM and ft-tntta Uat, Ketuuktrtlle, N. C , - J. KOBEKT GRADT. KDITOB OWNER bterd at ti FMt OfflM, KmaafTine, N. C at Mmd elaaa BMttcr. , TILIPHONIS , Wnmmb.nJ. : Waimaw"85S-6 , . SUBSCRIPTION RATES: SS.M par year fai Duplin County; fUt par jreat pear mtstie DapHa Coastr. tn Nerth CarcJlna; fM per rear eutsMe North Carolina, exeept to Men tn V. 8. Armed Fereea, Anywhere, fJ.M per rear. AdrerUstnf rates faralaked on request A Demoeratlo Journal, devoted to the material, educational. i and agricultural Interest! of Dnplm County. Notional Advertising Amebkah Pbiss New Vera. I JOE BEAVER' rLII W ''fOJiS&'i 1 1 li Ul fk'gg3g j 1 'I believe In practical girls, my dear; plant H ndjeMtday they'll build you a home. l WINFIELD L. THOMPSON, M. D., F. A. C. S. ANNOUNCES THE OPENING OF HIS OFFICE 809 Simmons Street (Next To The Hospital) Goldsboro, North Carolina Practice Limited To CONSULTATION, SURGERY AND GYNECOLOGY Office Hours: Telephone: Br Appointment 59 SPECIAL WANTED TO BUY LIVE POULTRY Have Order For Ten Thousand Pounds Live Poultry. Will Pay 30c ft FOR HEAVY HENS 16c ft FOR ROOSTERS 20c ft FOR LEGHORNS . Bring All You Have To Sell On Tuesday Morning, March 16, From 9 A. M. .To 1 P. M. ' Our Truck Will Be Parked On W. Park Avenue At The Old Outlaw's Cement Block Yard. , Track Will Call At Your Yard For Poultry V. r v Write AE3AR POULTRY COMPANY LILLDfGTONN. C. , . .eretenletWe , ASS9(,Mlta By Ed NofzFge this bouquet of Unit frtti ,vir AM SPEAKS lntermlionol Uniform y tOUU MMTH. P. J SCRIPTURE: Acts 20:17-38; Ephesiani '"DEVOTIONAL READING: Phlllpplant :4-8. Christian Character Lesson for March 14, 1918 WHO is the most valuable person in your community? In many communities it has come to be the custom to select the Man of the Year or the Wom an of the Year, the Idea usually being to name the person, through a process of sampling of pub lic opinion, who has rendered the out- l. CT , standing service of I the year. nA Sunday's lesson is a dramatic scene out ol the long ago, picturing a com munity's tribute to Dr. Newton a truly great man, the apostle Paul. Read Acts 20:17-38, and you will have the story. LOVED AND HONORED THE first impression I get from this story is the fact that these people of Ephesus loved Paul. They loved him enough to lay aside their work and hasten to the near by seaport of Miletus to see him for the last time, and to bow down in his presence and honor him. Why did they thus love Paul? Because be had told them about God. Yon need but read again the record of Paul's ministry in that Important city of Ephesus to be reminded of how greatly he had served them in the name of Jesus. Loved and honored! What a trib ute to the worth of Christian char acter Wouldn't you appreciate the tribute which they paid Paul as the goal out yonder to which you strive? Boys and girls of today may thus be honored tomorrow, if they will live for Jesus as Paul did. .THE POWER OF RIGHT LIVING PAUL not only told the Ephesians how to live, but Illustrated day by day in his own life what he preached to them. The most elo quent sermons are not spoken, but lived. "What you are speaks so loud ly I can't hear what you say." The boy and man who playa the game straight are putting Into practice what the teacher and preacher proclaims on Sunday. The power of right living will win Its way today, Just as It did In the long ago when Paul witnessed for Jesus m Ephesus. It was not easy to live for Christ In Ephesus, nor is it easy to live for Mm in Chicago or Los Angeles or Boston or Miami, but it is the one way to ultimately impress the world of the reality of Christianity. PAUL'S CONSUMING PASSION WE ARE what we are becoming, and never was this axiom of life more powerfully illustrated than in the case of Paul. "I press on toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus," Philipplans 3:14. And in Ephesians 0:8-21, Paul reviews the qualities of conduct which produce worthwhile character, admonishing all' Chris tiana to strive for these qualities. "I live, yet not I, Christ Ilveth In me," Is another of Paul's watchwords, and still again, "I can do all things through Christ, who strengtheneth me." It was the consuming passion of his life to embody the teachings of Christ in his words and in his works. It is conceivable that the people at Ephesus had come to see Christ in the life of Paul, and that his daily ministry In their midst convinced them that God was in Christ recon ciling the world unto himself. WHAT AM I WORTH? THE question then emerges, What am I worth to my com munity? When I come to the end of the Journey, will the people who know me best honor and love me for what I have done? I ean see the people of Ephesus bowing on the dock at Miletus, kissing this weary old servant of the Lord. It la a beautiful scene. This tribute meant more to Paul than all the gold of Ephesus would have meant. It was compensation of abiding worth to him. And what la vastly more Important, It was glory to God which must have evoked the praise of the angels about the great White Throne. (Copyright by tht Interaitiontl Council ol RefigiouM Eduction on beball ol 40 Protestant denominations. Released by WHU Fctturts.) On God's Word John Wycliffe, in the introduction to his translation of the Bible into English in 1380, wrote as follows: "When the teachings of the Bible are generally accepted and acted on, then shall we have a govern ment of, for and by the people. Four hundred years later the Amer ican republic was established the first great democracy and it was successful because the Constitution and the Bill of Rights were founded on God's Word. A. J. CAVENAUGH Wallace N. C . : ' "'V:vi JEWELER ! DIAMONDS WATCrrS 2 II 12 DUPLIN TIMED 'W wjfo mi,Lf r mar Faison Men To Organize Chamber Of Commerce At a supper meeting, held in the Faison community building Frida evening at 7 o'clock, a five-m.n committee was appointed to study the best ways of organizing a Cham ber of Commerce for the Duplin Produce center, with instructions to report back to interested citizens in another meeting set for Friday, March 12 at 7 p. m. The committee, composed of Jo seph L. King, C. A. Decker, Jamos H. C. Hill, A. M. Davis and J. B. Stroud, was also instructed to draw up a proposed constitution, set of by-laws, and to sound public- op inion on the possibility of such an organizat or. being a success in Faison. Movement for the organizing of a Chamber of Commerce has been going on in Faison fo:- the past few weeks, and culminaced in a public meeting last Friday nig.it. KINSTON AUTO AUCTION EVERY FRIDAY 1:00 ?. M. Sell While Prices Ar Still High lir car on the auction block for only $5.00 ANYONE BUY ANYONE SELL SALE RAIN OR SHINE - convert your car into cash" Herbert Pate AUCTIONEER Goldsboro Highway Phone 4527 How women and girls m get wanted relief from functional periodic pain Carnal, many women w, til brought re lief from th eromp-Uks agony andnernna train of functional periodlo dlatreo. Taken Ilk a tonlo. It abould stimulate appetite. L aid digestion, thus neip nuiia resut. k ance for the "time" to eome. Btattod an oerora "your inner-, would neip relieve pain aue n purely i functional periodlo oauses. Try Itl CARDU1 11 - . w. oooooooooooi WHEN YOU NEED SERVICES OF AN AUCTIONEER CALL BILL HINES, JR. Phone 270-1 262-6 WARSAW, N. C. 900000000000 r Southerland Electric Co. . Warsaw, N. C Phone 270-1 AFTER TAXES At this meeting Charlie McCullers, executive secretary of the Kinston Chamber of Commerce, was prin cipal speaker. J. B. Stroud was elected tempor ary chairman and opened the meet ing, following a delicious supper rerved by the ladies of the Method ist Church. He called upon James H. C. Hill to presert Mr. Ml Cullers, whose address consisted cf needs purpose and responsibilities of a Chamber of Commerce. He ftrongly urged that Faison organize a Cham ber in order to avail itself of the opportunities for prog.-os, which such a body could produce. At the conclusion an open forum was held, and as a result of the opinions expressed, the above named committee was elected to work out the details of getting the Chamber of Commerce properly organized and started. About 50 interested business men attended th- meeting County Court Jurors For April Court Jurors selected for the April wmm than any other make oil czz Truo for years and truer than ever today with the advent of this newer, smarter, finer Chevrolet for 19481 Official registration figures prove that more people drive Chevrolet! and seven independent surveys prove that more people want Chevrolets than any other make of carl The reason, of course, Is more valve. And now Chevrolet value Is made all the more outstanding by the smart new styling, brilliant new colors, and even more luxuriously appointed Interiors which have been added to all YoVI And there tart any other car In Hs Held that gNw the Big-Car comfort of CaevroM far 1948 direct result of the UnBtied Knss Acrlon Coding Ride. l.crcij r.-dr FRIDAY, 111" w. term of County Court are as fol lows: Robert Pickett, Dempsey W. Smith, E. J. Summerlin, Jr., Henry Tyndall, J. H. Moore, C. E. Whitfield, Zollie Kornegay, Mike H. Henderson, A. Lavrcnce Mathis, William Foster Wells, C. R. John son, Frank Taylor, Randolph Fa trell, W. S. Tadlock, C. W. Moo'-e, O'Neal Britt, Jonas Sumr.er, Her 31 N. C. Consolidated Hide Co.; Inc. GOLDSBORO, NORTH CAROLINA Now Located Foot of Waynesborough Ave. Former Weils Brick Yard . u SPECIALIZING IN HIDES, SKINS, FATS & RAW B01IES IF CALLED IMMEDIATELY Q WE WILL PICK UP DEAD CATTLE, MULES Phone Goldsboro Best way to our plant left at first More people drive. More people rjnS; the other advantages of Chevrolet's famous BIG-CAR QUALITY AT LOWEST COST. See the new 1948 Chevrolet, and you'll know why more people- drive Chevrolets than any other Chevrolet's world's champion Valve-in- ' Head engine gives an unequalled coe oinaHon of performance, endurance, do pendabUHy and conoary. 'rt. GOe man W. Huggins, a W. Su rratt, Jr., Job Swlnson, Simon W, Jones Winifred Guy, A, C. Hanchey, d! Y. HoUingsworth, and J. C. Htrrell. Old Madam Morris This la My First Visit Hero A seventh Daughter Born with a Veil, not to bo classed with Gyp. lea , Over SO years . experience, -p Advice on all affairs of life. Please dont con. fuse my work with that of the ordinary fortune ..toller. ' The truth or nothing. R. member, a doubter nev er wins. You'll find me , , superior to all readers. Reads past, present and future. Of fice for white and colored. Hours 10 a. m. to 9 P- m. Open dally and Sunday. .Permanently located In trailer studio on Wilson highway two miles out. Take Green Gables bus to my office. Look for Hand Sign, Goldsboro, N. C. : (adv.) FORSALE SASH DOORS SHEETROCK - PAINTS DRAIN TILE TERRA COTTA PIPE GLASS -LIME CEMENT - CRICK -'PLASTER'" ' ASPHALT SHINGLES AND ALL KINDS OF ROLL ROOFING Z. J. Carter & Son Wallace, N. C .,T - J 1 1532, Collect from Mt. Olive, turn stop light mm Yetrll admire Hi tasteful new ityting, the new sotor har monic!, the now and ridief ophol story and appoint ments which add to awe to the en viable tig-Car bMiity of Chevro let's Body by fuber. make! The record demand for new Chevrolets prompts es to suggest that yoe keep your present car In good running condttion, See et for service fedbyf ' ' .,'rUJIl i

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