■Hint Church Is Sponsoring a Tonight - Friday Beginning at 6 o’clock ✓ Plates-$l.oo each Centre Hardware Company Phone 4646 Farmville, N. C. cox •1 (Continued from page 1) at the church. Ho helped to got a Cuh Scout troop.starbed and, with veteran trainees, has done much on the new Boy Scout hut. In addition to other duties, he has managed to find time to serve as woodworking instructor for the vete rans’ training program in the culture department of the high (< h for the past three winters. Soon after . i to Farmville he was offered _ he came the job of woodworking teacher for the school. When he began working with die veterans, they were as skep- ^ tical of what he knew aboutx wood working and repairing as were the West Point citizens years ago. His knowledge of woods, construction, fin ishes, etc., he fully ^realizes is a God given gift. An uncle was gifted in the inventing line and turned out many articles for home use. During the three afternoons'a week he spends at the sBop, Mr. Oox has made a combination radio-phonograph and a crib for two-year-old Jane With the exception of a few chairs, all furniture in the parsonage is handmade. He built cabinets and did other work to bring the kitchen more NOTICE OF RE-SALE OF SCHOOL PROPERTY Under and pursuant to the power of sale contained in General Statutes 115-86, the undersigned Pitt County Board of Education will offer for re sale, the sale made on March 4th, 1950r having been raised according to law, to the highest bidder or bidders for cash at public auction in front of the Town Hall in the Town of Farm ville, North Carolina, on Saturday, March 5,1950, at 12:00 o’clock NOON, the following described personal pro perty: One lot of scrap lumber estimated to contain between 20,000 and 30,000 feet, being the same left' over from the razing of the old Farmville Color ed School building. The bidding is to start at 1125.00 and will remain open for a period of 10 days. The successful bidder or bidders will be required to deposit with the court 20 per cent of said high bid pending confirmation of same. This the 8th day of March, 1950. PITT COUNTY BOARD OF EDUCATION Lewis & Rouse, Attys. 17-2c BELK-TYLER’S for Spring and Summer ik. SEWING One of the season’s smartest fabrics. Light, crisp dotted swiss to make lovely Jodies’ ond chil dren’s blouses end dresses. Many colors to choose from. Save now at our low price. 300 Yards >m in 1902 near Haesell in Martin «aty. He grew up on a fun and as no stranger to work. Ee com stod four grades at die Hopewell 'hool in Pitt county and then stay I out on account of illness. When he was nineteen, he joined le church in a revival conducted by & Mashbum' Listening to the ible being read in the-family circle t night, Mr. Cox had had a feeling .St if he ever joined the chdrch he iuat become a minister. So he set Smith Coierete Predicts, lie. KINSTON, N. C. Phone 3412 V We Band to a Standard— Not To A PRICE Farmvilk Dealer: THE TURNAGE COMPANY three and a half hours daily, might stay at the school for f 72 a year, ex ciuamg dooks ana ciotnes. Sin© the college was not accredit ed at that time, Mr. Cox finished high'School and the first three years there and transferred to Phillips university, at Enid, Okla., where he obtained his A. B. and M. A. degrees. In Oklahoma he preached every Sunday at a nearby town and work ed during the week at odd jobs. In the summers he conducted revival meetings, worked in restaurants and cafeterias. One year he sold Bibles in a nearby Eastern Carolina coun ty, often making as much as $40 a week. “Oklahomans really know the mean ing of Southern hospitality,’' declares / the preacher, who says that they ac cept you for what you are and you are in their good graces until you prove yourself otherwise. “I thought the more viewpoints I could get, the better prepared - I would be,” stated Mr. Cox, when''ask ed why he chose to go on to Drake university, Dee Moines, Iowa, for his B. D. degree. Before going to Drake, he was pastor of a church in Stillwell, Okla., for a year. He graduated from Drake in Aug- i ust, 1934. and accepted the pastorate at West Point in February, 1936. | ] The idea that a pastor must be an ; ardent reader and student is exempli- ■ fied by Mr. Cox who keeps several '• library Books from nearby colleges on , hand to read as a part of hid regular ; preparation for sermons. Whenever » comes across something that be nnot find enopghabout In his libra f» he gets in his car and goes' to reenville or Wilson and hunts for it one of the libraries. Mrs. Cox, who taught dramatics and ngUah before her marriage, helps out in the church work, too. She fre quently gives programs and book re views, both at church meetings and clubs, aqd is a director of the Chi Rhos, a Junior fellowship group. The boys in the family are Chandler and PauL _ r*-: 3 Sophisticated GOTHAM in gold and ivory is an ideal background for your more formal occasions. ROBERTS JEWELERS Service and Quality That Excel North Main Street N Phone 479-7 FarmviDe, N. C. I..,., . . f . I. . .. . i. . .. ..... ..I. .1 . ...» EXTRA SPACE AT THE "CONVENIENCE LEVEL" • The 1960 Croeley Refrigerator brings the things you need most right to your Anger tips. The new Shelvador design gives you up to 23% more space in same size cabinet— partment holds up to 70 pounds of frozen food including 8 pounds of ice cubes. And a new easy mm aWUTiWilJMUg pw" celain enamel inside. Big frozen food com BiG, NEW, 7-CUBIC /OOT MODELS AS LOW - ^ U Mm