Newspapers / The Farmville Enterprise (Farmville, … / Dec. 24, 1943, edition 1 / Page 1
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888 German UghbOT dhot down ia bomber gunners and fighter pUflid A total of 117 heavy bombers havaJ been tost on ft« raids, <01 bat oal) against Germany. Nat Meatified. H»e bombers encountered heavy clotfda, possibly explaining why the Eighth Air Force for the fourth time this month did not immediately tdeatfy the targets. It was revealed cHtttf today that under Ma policy of tuaan —Ham no annotracaanai# would he made until fall result* m/ 4k. WjL»»il>i.,irn ,m .1t,| i .1 nil or hv ooniBings were <revenninea. It was revealed for the fMt time today that a December 19th raid oa "Northwest Germany" was directed against the port of KM. Capture Village Whflej Chasing Retreating Japs; Attfd Planesj pro—id close behind retreating Jap•MM forces in Near Guinea Tuesday driving nearly two miles northwest of Fortification Point to occupy HoMka village and further intwl their control of the Hnon Peninsula, The Japanese, facing Allied Ucnrtl en aQ sectors at the Southwest Rfc-I dffe front, lost a troop transport I night vhsn bombers swept over the I tkraotfk January 89. • m SED FOODS— Greea E. and F in Book 4 are igk January SO. L Period 8 coupons, now e Middle West Mid Soutt, d through March IS in the «t and through February Sooth. Period 8 coupon* lid in the Ettrt and far m nmw Vmh, «ml personal ftvm the Secretary of War, tary of the Ntrjr, and high if'ithe various services. Oh i Eve and Christmas Day, la [on the horn* front wfll gt*ms from s^rfier* overMing a chorus of 200 Amerm in the Holy Land, a Htree decorating from ah t le South Pacffic, and mids from some place h4N||K s lines in Italy. c Word To HnX-tt-Kia. -tin. of servicemen who s taken prisoners by the ill receive swift and aeeuric lion, the Office of War of has announced. The nt immediately will tiansuiy accurate information IcBable source dealing with of war. OWI warned ■eHability of enemy baoadagainst paying shy private or organzation for such in "Peace I leave <d||iigjt|! my paace I give onto you: Not as the world giveth, give I unto you. \ . .. (St John 14:27) How wtxHlMrfql M»*|beee words of 1 Iliiismmfr years aio, and hew appropriate to our needs today. The peaca of mind, peace of «ool,vthe peace within oureelrea it happiness a aort of happiness that the world cannot give. Neither money nor power can » command it, and nothing man-made can produce HAnd yet it ia yours for the asking. Worth more than all the kingdoms of tha world, it coat* nothing. " Bat ymi wffl aay, "I mart Wf mvmk'&ny myself If I want that hnppinada 'Of what? ,0|i# of earthly thing* that vanish quickly enough in their own importance. Look at the lilies of tit* field, the birds of tha forest, the sunset; the trees whsae lefty boughs cry out as they awfigr in the breess all • nature radiates tha joy of heaven. And we who poaseaa the "power and will to create" made in His image—sit backhand whine. And we do this simply because we have hot created j£ within ouzaalvea the knowledge that God ia love, and that love ia power, and that nothing material uaaftfctts. If we would have real happineas we must eaMwte that pewer, realizing that we poaaeaa and are part ot Him who possesses all things and can do all things. Seek first tha kingdom of God. Seek it within yourself. Had your own serai. And whsn you have thnrvn aaide all earthly, material, vain, imaginary pteauune, and brought yourself into the higher . .realms of thought, yon will find that you have in • that soul a love and sympathy fdr others. You will find it ao beautiful that to soil it would be the U ; tiling you wonld do. AS31 when you tte enice a* of this, God will .pet* to you through your 1. He will show you thing* bidden fWm the ndations of the earth. God will make life worth ng because you Will sfce the wortd is tile iiltendckrihed-.ta ?Tor al! 1Mb natdral beauty i given fpr our happines. u>d because of Hi* •t love, for the Object of Hto ciMtH. "hen you will thud the peace tfc* tfie world cari&W ge^e with Him, peace with yogweif. And hing will interrujfc <t8i« feiyfeece; for you will ii' . _ _ - *A- -m M. . • »• . -i . - until we rtt in TW." ^5 ^ Do this, and the so-catted carta Xhd troubles of this man-made wortd will viHiih. You wiU look with your eyes upon the light at a troe life of happiness, Intended for m ftwra all creation. You will go througfc life with a smfleetocejnai^ will ** which only a free mind and a clear conscience can. Your mind wSW** to do Hie biddng, and to accept it for year beet interest. Y«ir love for you meet^wili bring you,^ through Ills otheS ttowLtZZ*while. They will know that he** was one who had fowid the 'wettkt Of Hf*^*ttause he had found in hia soul the image end' Hfc&ttMe of CSbd: a God of peace and love «dsttng for all entrfnity, and at whom we «W a ptrt. Adolph Le Moult ml tMttl tbiHgk W WHH: ' JJiiiLn •• tat nonM| wBi aetigm, rlth vwiw In «tr eye*, of ecsrtet flame, & fott gathering. Before it Mows Itself oat in the test hours of ld(S, tt will hare heaped about 400 million tiaMfe—most of them bearing the simple message abov*-on the table tops of American homee alone. The fall will be heavy in other lands, too. The ChristaUa card fa not old, yet lir greeting-can) ioJaatry; It ts the object of the' factor* hunt; and, thoqgfc Jta use ia an almost too rigid oonvtatbm, it is one of man's readiest, most-welcomed meseenget* of frtendtfiip. Who made the first Christmas card isnt quite dear. Some say it waa Thomas Shorrock, * Scotchman, who •ant a fWjKinjr reading A Gude Jtof Year to Ye, about 1840. Others credit W. E. Egley, a 16-year-old English lad, whom cod, showing many Warm yuletide scenes, hangs in the British ttoMom. He made the etching in 1843. Bat another Englishman, Sir Henry Cole, is usually named as the originator. Hie card, a lithograph by J- C Horsley, bore his holiday wishee to 1,000 friends, and thus gave . • . A 2 : - <? \ . . .- jTs?' ... X3 in White Russia and
The Farmville Enterprise (Farmville, N.C.)
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Dec. 24, 1943, edition 1
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