7 TZJ Et'FLIN Tmz: JTO.T". ft, IS."?. V . Or . .. ..J L.i.ull i'ui.l LC ..Jl..j Ci.J i -.iio Trcininr) SchccI lit Leech Carolina Beach, July 11 Farm : lead nn In the Southeastern district of North Carolina, embracing 17 counties, heard E. Z. Jones, State Director of Civil Defense and other aienrbers of the state staff present Crril Defense, the necessity for it, its organization and methods of training in a two-hour school of in- straction held Friday afternoon in the city auditorium. The Civil De fuses program followed the regular quarterly meeting of Farm Agents ana Home Demonstration Agents from Anson, Bladen. Brunswick, Columbus. Cumberland, Duplin. Harnett, Hoke, Lee, Montgomery. Moore. New Hanover, Pender, Richmond, Robeson, Sampson and Scotland counties. , "Efficient wen co-ordinated Civil Defense in every eastern county Is essential to the safety and pro tection of the state as a whole", Jones said. "Every person should be thoroughly familiar with the Idea that It can happen here' and take full advantage of the pre-dis-star planning and training offered by North Carolina Civil Defense. The people want the facts and the training. It Is our: and your res Wilmington Coca Cola Bottling Company Wlbauwtan. K. C J, YOU HAVI MAD IT IN YOUR NIWSfAPIR . . . - NOW GET THE BOOK 50 INSMRINO fTOftlaa Of HOW THI WOMB'S WIATDT HYMN FLEXIBLE BINDING $1.00 I BINDING $).50 - 120 FAOn BOOK MZI t tWi hmaHmly written beak CM Inner Nh ye" how thus VBd 40 AtrMa? fatflawsMN hjTswlwss) . VssW Ws4MMB ROCKOrAOBS JBSUS LOVER OF MY SOUL SWEET HOUR Of PRAYER WHAT A FRIEND WE HAYS IN JESUS ABIDE WITH MS VV.ft-fV. OH CHRIST THE SOLID ROCK 1 STAND ' THERE ISA FOUNTAIN BILLED WITH BLOOD COMB THOU BOVNT Ot EVERT BLESSING , ALL HAIL THE BOWER Ot JESUS! NAME ; IN THE SWEET IT AND BT .CU 1 DUPLIN TIMES r TH1 .. I KENANSVILLE ,' N. , MVIMU S 1 It ijjw m mm 10 par av " mAA B Casta ot - Copto t da turn - B Address 1 Oty ,. jMT;,.,.r - la 1 X . 1 " tm the spring sf IMS yeesg fts seat en the paipit ec ute Beeooa sapuas Camnh at Boehetter, M. T. Aaoat to Breach his trial sennon- before new , eongrcgatiocu he thambaa .tbrragh a hymnal te aelect aa tmpres ' stve song. Over in the book kla hand stopped. His eyes wldeaed. Then he amilad. Hla wife mast have played a prank en him. Hla theaghts want baafe te a night three years saruerv n was If arch It, 1S& The nation was te taf atoll. The War-Btwean4h8Utas had swang into ' tts tresis stride. Abraham Linaola bad not yet lasses Ma Bntanelpatlon ProclamaUoa and no body knew what the bleed-shad was all soon . . , nor where the straggle might lead. Everywhere. :. people were praying tor Divine guidance. la Phil adelphia the son of the Ooveraor ot New Hams-, shire made a talk before a group that hsd gath- end at the First Baptist Church for praj'or. . . JT besets sm 0 Mal tMtt , : 0 worst with feeoveiitp comfort ;iu;. . X WaafCer f do. Wheree'er I ae, Btm tit God hand that leads! . . '. f V :- ; . Bomttimn 'mid toenet of Ueput stoeat, r . ' Bometimet wht ITdea'a aowers Hoom, ' , Bf ' sM, e'er (resoled tea, ' fttn tit Bit ,hm4 not Uadtth m. r. ponsibility to see that they get It." Lt.-Colonel John Gresh USAF,; Ground Observer Corps Coordina tor, explained toe "Operation Sky Watch., the plan for enemy or hos tile plane detection. Training films were shown by Russell Nicholson, State Civil Defense Training Offic er, and Mrs. Sarah Boyd Weaver, Deputy. Director of Public Affairs and Women's Work spoke on the rural woman's responsibility in the Civil Defense Program.; ;: - I9JI National Wlldllle Fodoferio ':,'WIId ( Strawberry , ." The big red strawberries that taste- so good with shortcake and cream come from plants growing in home gardens and on truck farms. They are carefully tended to make them produce berries that are Just right for eating fresh or for making into preserves. . ' There was a time, though, when the only strawberries to be had were wild ones growing in fields. To get the tasty fruit in those days, you had to take a basket and search for a berry patch. . If you were living In the eastern half of the (United States, the chances are that you would have found good picking. That is the region where the Wild Strawberry has been abundant for years. It is still plentiful from New England to Florida and west to Oklahoma and South Dakota. ; The piace to look for the plant, says the National Wildlife Feder ation, is in fields.1 pastures, and grassy slopes. . It grows out in the open where there is sunshine to keep the ground dry and to ripen the frui tin the late spring. Like cultivated strawberries, the Wild Strawberry is a low plant from three to nine 1 Inches high that spreads over the ground. It grows from runners, or shoots, which reach out and . take root ct many (places. Fastened to the runners are WIK1 WSITTSi a S ' WOMW s I t URVICI ham: HUNT i . . I far pMae "d IK Mtm ! ! bMM 11.00 atft " UM 9 :.. Stale 3 fi) 4-1 - is xmMWm ri Gwernot $on dUwven a hpnn mUnlstse took The speaker and hla wife west home with Dea con Thomas Wattaea tor the tflght, The deacon eamplimented the yoang speaker en hla eelestlom ec a text. Retiring to hie room Joseph OUmore -sat sp tote the wee beers writing seme verse. I The next morning Mrs. OUmore was bp ahead -et her hastens. 8be took jthe paper with tts 'vara bat said Both ins. Olbnore forgot it eon i pletely. Mrs. OUmore sent the poem to Baptist periodical. Composer William Bradbury read It, set H to masie and pahushad it in his hyauuu,. "The OoMea Cenear. ... :'-v ' ; ' At Reehestar when loseph Ollmora, Di. stopped his hand on peg ia the hymaal hla thoaghta . went back to that night in Philadelphia when be talked from the text "He beadeth me beside the atlu watere." At any rate, he wanted to hear how a hymn soanded that he had written, so he aaked the eoagregatlon to sing . . , ; ,;..'., t ,".;...'-.,.; ( Lord. 1 moult etotp Tap band is fli.t,' ' 1 Nor seer mwrmmr nor reptos, - ( , Contnt, moPopmr let 1 tee. ! Mine tU tf Cod tht kadsth , 1 And mh nt tatk en earth It done, Whtn, sy .rky ervcti the wietotyt mt, -, ' JTea death' eold woes 1 wilt hot flee. tine God thrtf Jordan Uddeth n. r.M.-' GvrT-rit: Lcrgs Divorce Rate Warns Us to Heed Commandments , TfAMILY religion has deep roots in the Old Testament, and in the Jewish literature were many precepts, giving wis counsel, to parents, and ' setting forth the duties of children, thus establish ing with clearness the conditions of family welfare and a, happy homo life. ' . It ought to be noted how strong ly some of the choicest of these precepts' stress the law 'and com mandments. "My son, keep thy father's commandment, and for sake not the law of thy mother.'' There must be standards of right, and a sense of responsibility, if there are to be sound relationships and happiness in the home. ; The acceptance of parenthood without an adequate sense of re sponsibility is the root of a great deal of home breakdown and trag edy today. A first essentia! of s good home is good parents. What can be expected of children U their parents do not set them a good example? Moreover, precept and teaching are not enough, for children will soon detect an insin cerity, and the worst of all counsel we could give our children would be to say, "Dont do as I do, but do as I say." ' : "Train up a child in the way he should go," is the Bible's injunc tion to parents, with the assurance that when he is older he will not depart from it Alas! that assur ance is not always Justified, for many influences are upon the child, as well aa those of the home, and too often they break down and destroy what the home hai sought to do. But without propet training the child has little chanct at all, so that exceptions in reality do not nullify, the law that gooc training brings good results. , The most acute social and reli gious problems today are associ ated with home and family. Witt) an increasingly large proportion of marriages ending in separation and divorce, we are facing omi nous times. And most of the pro posed remedies are doing little to get at the causes. . ; . The principal cause for the breakdown is the. lack' of regard for law and commandments the failure, to observe the rules of what is life's most important gamei leaves, growing in clusters of three leaflets apiece. Each leaflet has coarse teeth along its edges and a rough, hairy surface. , It is about two Inches long. Here and there among the leaves are small white flowers. . Each flower is from a half to three fourths of an inch in diameter and has five round, white petals. - Attached to the same stalks that bear the flowers are the sweet red berries. v ' ' ' Though not as large and attractive In shape as cultivated strawberries the wild ones look and taste very much like the kind that come from gardens. As you might guess, the, reason for the resemblance is that Wild Strawberries -are the ancestors of the garden variety. By working with theiwild plants: experts" have produced' the strawberries which we cultivate; ' ' J Wild Strawberries now rank sec pnd to their tame cousins, but they still furnish fruit for eating. And wherever they grow, they perform a useful service by clinging to the ground ana protecting the soil ag alnst erosion. Grassland Tour Will Visit State Delegates to the Sixth Internat ional Grassland Congress at Pen nsylvania State College will have an opportunity to visit North Car olina and five other Southern states on one of four drganlzed group tours. ,;-,"--;'"'i!vi?' According to S. H. Dobson, pas ture specialist for the State College Extension Service, the tours will be held in four different areas to demonstrate accomplishments In grass farming of the United States and. Canada, both on actual farms and in research and educational in stitutions. ; The tours are mainly for the benefit ,of foreign parti cipants in the Congress . - The Southern tour will visit Vir ginia. Tennessee, Alabama, Georgia South Carolina, and North Caro lina. , After leaving Clemson Col lege, the group will visit the Bllt- 7M he wrot ' .' if more farms at Asheville on Sep tember 3, to observe grazing, hay, and silage . production programs. The tour will also include a stop at the Southeastern Artificial Bree ding Stud. j, -..:: ;; En route to St'atesvllle on Sep tember 4, the .tour will stop at a milk plant, an alfalfa dehydration plant, a feed mill, a seed procesting plant and a fertilizer mixing plant. j On September 5 the group will stop at North Carolina State Col lege, Raleigh,- to visit begT cattle grazing experiments. ' dmaTl plot experiments at State College, in cluding fertility, .adaptation and management studies on forage ape- SCRIPTtnre: Judges S:l S:SS. DEVOTIONAL. BCAOINOl Pulm T. Hero, Artist, Sabt Leasea for Jaly M. m rtX GREAT TRAGEDY of life is that man has three Incompatible ideals. So says a famous thinker of our time. These three are the hero, the artist, the saint The hero's vir tue is strength; . the artisf s is beauty, and the Saint's is holiness. A hero, in the course of his heroic acts, does things which would stain the honor of a saint and which are too 'Ugly for a sensitive' artist even to think about Saints on the other hand are often most unherolc; they "wax valiant" In submission, not. in fights . and they . often . care very little for beauty. Artists likewise may be personal cowards and live anything but saintly lives. Yet so ciety needs all three, though the values one cherishes may be Just the' opposite of what the other prises. Very rarely, the same man may show traces of artist, saint and hero. '...i Hero Gideon THE WORD "Judge" in the Book of Judges, usually means what we would call a hero, a military man with a successful record. Then, as now. if s man made good in the army he was after thought of as an army man. His title and his rank stuck to him his life long. : . We think of General Grant as an army man, and of Lee as another; though one was President of the United States and the other one a 'distinguished college president So Gideon eemes dews ia his tory aa one of the "Judges' who delivered Israel from a power ful enemy. This alms the- enemy was the BfldlanHes, a roaring ' naisanoe if ever there was' ene. fr jHiaiasiiaas ware as mads, they ' 'i lived ' where' Tney pleased, and f they lived eff the peaeefal farm ' . era wherever they were. ' .There were to. many that their army looked like a swarm of lo ,custs. They were seen only once a year, but that was enough. They would wait out in the wilderness until the crops were ready for har vest; then they would dash into the country, raid every farm from bor der to border, and skip out again, leaving the Israelites on the edge of starvation for another year. ' How Gideon, a small farmer and a timid soul by nature,, beesms the hero who nearly exterminated the Mldiamtes and set hi people, tree, ia one of toe most fascinating tale's In the Old Testament The people loved him and remembered him for that one thing above all: he could tight! : Glass lbs Artist ' , THERE ARE MORE WAYS than one to be artistic. General Gid eon painted no pictures, carved no statues, wrote no poems. But he wss an artist all the same. There Is soinetbing artistic about any good workmanship .and it Is as true of military campaigns as of everything .'incidentally, generals have a temptation to overlook this. At the Battle ; of Fredericksburg in the American CWU War. when , the northern army was marching into the grinding trap which Lee and his generals bad prepared, ' Lee re marked that it's a good thing war is so terrible,' otherwise we should become too fond of it He wss speak ing from the general's viewpoint of 'course.' The private is seldom in danger of being too fond of war. . At all events Gideon's earn saigas were Just aa "beaatlfnl" tat aO detalla as anything Na poleea, Lee, Hitler er Hannibal - ever Invented.'. . : jv :. ', Can a hero be an artlitT In his way, yes; like any other craftsman, he can do a necessary, rough and dirty piece of work in a way that calls out the exclamation: Beapti- fuiin''.-':'-,-, ; ;",.,. Saint Gideon ' pAN A SOLDIER be a saintf If Vs you mean by "saint" the Ideal of what a Christian should be, most would say No. General Lee said at (he end of his Ufe that If he had it to live over again he would not be a soldier, h - ' - i i '. And sttR. the writer ef the " letter to the Hebrews aa toe New Testament dees net heat ' ' tate to Ust Gldeea, and even that half-hero Barak, right, along with the rest la his hat ef Ugh aslnte. the men and womea ef )Wth,:;VMKVy ( Tor fundamentally if is faith that makes the saint And Gideon was a man of sturdy faith. To paraphrase Tennyson, his strength was as the strength of ten, because his faith was pure. So there have been count less men whose profession is arms who have also been men of faith. ' u ; c- iM' r"v ' i y., .... ..,..., h -f . -nl icSoa hmiorn ty'WVM ji JiiiiHii'R.iii'i.i i a "l,l;"f LJkCL Or. Forenwe cies. and breeding work on alfalfa. lespedeza, and trefolL will be view ed. The, tour will' end at noon September at Raleigh. v, s NOTICE OP ADMINISTRATION : The undersigned, havinc aiiali- fled as administrator of the esUte ooooooooooooooooa oooooooooooooooooo tooooooooooooo The Tima is attempting to give its readers a complete directory of all white churches are some denominations not listed and probably among those listed errors will be found. We our readers in giving us the correct information and missing information. If you find your church a card giving the correct information. PRESBYTERIAN REV. W. B HOOD, PASTOR Wallace Church Every Sunday Morning 2nd, 4th, and 5tfa Sunday nighti Blacks Chapel 3rd Sunday night RET J. M. NISBETT, PASTOR Reckflsh Church 2nd. and 4th Sunday mornings 3rd Sunday ngiht REV. WADE H. ALLISON, Pastor ,Mt Zion Church, Rose Hill 1st and 4th Sunday mornings 2nd and 3rd Sunday nights OAK PLAINS CHURCH . 3rd Sunday morning 1st Sunday night TEACHEY CHURCH 2nd Sunday morning 4th Sunday night REV. J. M. NEWBOLD, PASTOR Warsaw Church Every Sunday morning Bowdem Community Church 1st. 3rd. and 5th. Sunday evenings REV. J. T. HAYTER, JF, PASTOR Grove Church 2nd and 4th Sunday mornings HaUsville Church 1st and 3rd Sunday morings. REV. W. H. GOODMAN, PASTOR BeulavlUe Church Every Sunday morning PINK HILL GROUP Rev. Fanrior, Pastor Pink Hill Third Sunday A. M. and 1st Sunday P. M. PLEASANT VIEW 1st Sunday A. M. and 3rd Sunday P. M. SMITHS Second Sunday A. M. and Fourth Sunday P. M. HARPER-SOUTHERLAND Fourth Sunday A. M. and Second Sunday P. M. HEBRON Third Sundays 4 P. Sf. (3 P. M. Winter) Women of the Church PINK HILL General meeting Third Tues day night. Circle No. 1 First Tuesday night SMITHS First Friday night PLEASANT VIEW General meetnig Thursday P. M. after 3rd Sunday. Circle Thurs day P. M. before 3rd Sunday HARPER-SOUTHERLAND First Wednesday afternoon Y. P. Field Group 1st and 3rd Saturday evenings 6 P. M. UNIVERSAL 1ST Outlaw's Bridge Church Service, 1st Sunday night 8:00 p. m. 2nd and 4th Sunday morning, 11:6 a. as. . , Pastor, Rev. L. C. Prater Sunday School every Sunday Morning at 10:M a. na. Mrs. Ed Smith, Superintendent MISSIONARY BAPTISTS KENANSVILLE GROUP Rev. Lauren Sharpe, Pastor Kenansvllle 1st and 3rd Sundays Alum Springs 2nd and 4th Sundays BEULAVTLLE GROUP Rev. A L. Brown, Pastor Beulaville 2nd and 4th Sundays Cedar Fork 1st and 2nd Sundays Hallsvllle 'This directory is made possible through the eooperatio n of the following business firmst SCOTT'S STORE ATLANTIC COFFIN and L. E. POPE FURNITURE CO. I. J. SANDLIN COMPANY General Merchandise . CASKET COMPANY Complete Horns Furnishings Hdwe., Grocs. Dry Goods . W. Ei Waller, Prop. Rose HIM, N. C Magnolia, N. C. BenlavUle, N. C. ' LEON J. SIMMONS BELLE OIL COMPANY GRADT SUPPLY COMPANY J. L. QUINN Hardware Frigldaire Appliances Red Wing Feeds. Groceries General Merchandise Mt OUve, N. C. y . Pink Hill. NC. . Rt 1 Seven Springs Chinquapin, N. C. C. E QUINN -COMPANY ' DUPLIN TIMES, YOUR HOMER TAYLOR SMITH DRY CLEANERS General Merchandise COUNTY NEWSPAPER, General Merchandise Sanltone Cleaning Kenansvllle, N. C ' KENANSVILLE. N. C. ' Magnolia, N. C. Warsaw, N. C. , BRANCH BANK TRUST CO. G. E. ALPHIN STORE T. W. QUINN STORE " CATES PICKLE COMPANY The Safe Exeewtor ' Farm Supplies ' Groceries, Hardware, Feeds Packers of Cstes Pickles ' Warsaw, N. C. : SummerUn'a Croearoads , . . Rod Hill, near Scott's Store ., Faiaon, N. C ' M.B. HOLT COMPANY ' CALYPSO VENEER CO. . t (WARSAW FLOUR AND f General Merchandise , , Betall Lumber Jan , FEED MILLS Albertson, N. C . . - Cslypso, N.C. : . - Warasw, N. C. ; M. 1. LANIER ' L. P. TYNDALL'S SONS FRED HARDY ' CAROLINA BUILDING . ' Geal Mdse, Maple Hill . Genl Mdse, Farm Supplies Goal Merchandise , . SUPPLY COMPANY v-Pia Hook Road , . Pink HUfc N. C. t 1, Seven Springs Goldsboro Highway Chtoquapln, N. C .' o .W'-- ..M.''-..v...-Klneton..N. C .r. ,. YORE STORE ' , ' ' , , BLIZZARD A HOLMES MILL f -Wi- Groceries - anrInnY;:'. M2i"Bd 11 ".,:. Kenawviae. N. C.- - V'." ki ' V ".' - ' ' : : '. - Seven Springs, N. C EFD of Frederick (Fred) Smith, deceas ed, latent Duplin County, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the 11th day of July, 1933, or this no tice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make im SUNDAY SCHOOL AT ALL GOD'S TRIPLE REQUIREMENT i By REV. C. HERMAN TRUEBLOOD Text: "What doth the Lord require of thee, but to do justly, and to leve mercy, and to walk humbly with God?" Micah 6:8 Heartless creeds, ritualistic ceremonies, and "cut and DRIED programs," however correct In letter, are not enough: "for the letter killeth, but the spirit glveth life." Defenders of 'The Faith once delivered to the saints," who are minus the spirit of Christ, and who ignore the Golden Rule in practice, do the cause of Christ more harm than do all the cohorts of evil outside the church. The supposedly religious people of Mlcah's day were strong on rites and 'ceremonies, but they were appallingly weak on decent, up-right, religious practices. The prophet minced no words; he tore through the fake veneer of their hypocritical religious pre tenses, and courageously confronted them with the main question at issue. Said he: "Wherewith shall I come before the Lord, and bow myself before the high God? Shall I come before him with burnt offerings, with calves of a year old? He hath shewed the, O man, what is good; and what doth the Lord require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God." Mleah 6:6-8. For sincerity of purpose, consistency of conduct, and honor of God, let us consider God's Triple Re quirement of man: 1. DO JUSTLY. Mere profession is Insufficient: there mu;t be the practice of honesty and integrity in our dealings with mankind. In a world torn and distraught by strife, wars, hatred, and untold misery and in'ustices, it is a dastardly thing for pro fessing Christians, especially those in places of leadership, to pros titue their positions to fie low level of unholy and unjust dealings with their fellowman. All the teaching, preaching, church going, and work done In the name of religion, cannot atone for un fair, unjust, unscrupulous, un-Chiistlan deeds. "Justice consists in doing no injury to man; decency in giving them no offense." Cicero. "Thetpath-of the ust is as a shinning llzht, that shinneth more and more unto the perfect day." Prov. 4:18. 2. LOVE MERCY. To justice must be added mercy. Mercy is more than justice demands. Mercy is the quintessence of kind ness, and Christians are enjoined to "Be kindly affectioned one to another." Rom. 12.10. "Mercy is like the rainbow which' God hath set in the clouds; it never shines after it is night. If we refuse mercy here, we shall have only justice in eternity." Jeremy Taylor. "Let not mercy aid tn',vi fn-"V '-d about thy neck; write them upon the table of thine heart." Prov. 3 -3. "Sweet mercy is nobility's badge." Shakespeare. "Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy." Matt. 5:7. 3. WALK HUMBLY. Walking with God implies humility, harmony, and constant intercourse.. "True humility Is the highest virtue, mother of them all," said Tennysori. Certainly the person, possessed of a proud, haughty spirit, "wise in his own conceite," Is out of step and tune with the Infinite God. "God' reslsteth the proud but glveth grace to the humble." James 4:6. "Pride goeth before destruction and a haughty Whosoever shall humble himself as this little child,-the same is greateat to the kingdom of heaven." Matt. 18:4. 1 REV. ELLIOTT B, STEWART, Pastor Corinth 2nd and 3rd Sundays Teachey 1st and 4th Sundays CHINQUAPIN GROUP Rev. N. E Gresham. Pastor Sharon 1st and 2nd Sundays - Island Creek 1st and 3rd Sundays Dobson's Chapel 2nd and 4th Sundays Shiloh 1st and 4th Sundays mediate-payment to the undersign- ea. Thb is the 11th day bf Jaly, 1951 Ivey W. Eates, Administrator ' of , the estate of Frederick ' (Fred) Smith, deceased Route 2 i Pink Hill. N. C. HE. Phillips, Attorney "' CHURCHES EACH SUNDAY spirit before a fall." Prov. 16:18 I ROSE HILL Rev. J. V. CASE Services every Sunday FAISON Rev. M. M. Turner, Pastor 1st and 3rd Sundays JOHNSON CHURCH Rev. Paul .Mall, pastor 1st and 3rd Sundays MAGNOLIA GROUP Pastor 1st and 3rd Sundays Concord 2nd and 4th Sundays WALLACE Dr. Poet on. Pastor Services each Sunday Kensnsvllle, N. C. 8-;i 6T HEP J. CaTonaasi ' Jeweler - DIAMONDS WATCHES v- Watch as ewetry REPAIRING RNGRAYINa in Dupli nCounty There solicit the cooperation of not listed please drop us METHODIST CHURCHES WALLACE GROUP K. R. Wheeler, Minister Tel. 3786 Wallace Every Sunday morning and every Sunday night Providence First and Third Sun days at 3 o'clock p. m, ROSE HILL GROUP W. B. Cotton, Minister Tel. 3511 Rose Hill Charity WARSAW GROUP R. L. Creesno, Minister Tel. 365 Warsaw First, Second, and Fourth Sunday Mornings. Third Sunday night. Carlton Second and Fourth Sun day nights Xurkev Third Sunday morning and the First Sunday night FAISON D. F. Kinlaw, Minister Tel. 221 Second Sunday Morning and Fourth Sunday night. Also Fifts Sunday morning MOUNT OLIVE CIRCUIT W. C. Wilson. Minister TeL 2537 Bethel Fourth Sunday morning and Second Sunday night Calypso Second Sunday morning and Fourth Sunday night. Rone's ChapelSecond and Fourth Sundays at 10:00 a. m. Church of Jesus Christ Of Latter Day Saints Albertson Sacrement meeting 7:30 p. m. Sun. PINK HILL D. C. Boone, Minister Tel. 2756 Woodland First Sunday Morning and Third Sunday night Pink Hill Second and Fourth Sun days, Morning and -Night DUPLIN CHARGE R. H. Collins, Minister Tel 2132 Friendship Second Sunday morn ing and Fourth Sunday night Kenansvllle First Sunday morn ing and Third Sunday night n. x.w e.... i.a ,,Vnlaht and Second Sunday night Unity Third Sunday morning and First Sunday night Wesley Saturday night before the Second Sunday LIMESTONE CHAPEL Advent Christian Church Potters Hill Services 1st and 3rd Saturday Night Sun. and Sun. Night Alton Quinn. 1st Sunday, J. Y. Smith 3rd Sunday WELLS CHAPEL Rev. J J). Buerer, Pastor 2nd and 4th Sundays WARSAW Dr. A. W. Greenlaw, pastor Services each Sunday GARNER'S CHAPEL Rev. W. I. Terrell 1st and 3rd Sundays CALYPSO Pastor 2nd and 4th Sundays BEAR MARSH Pastor last and 3rd Sundays JONES CHAPEL 2nd Sunday morning and 4th Sun day evening. J r.. - y- w w w w V. V- V V & w w -WWW .

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