PAGE TWO
Editor & Publisher Amoy IPm
Published Every Thursday Bp
YANCEY PUBLISHING CO.
*> *
A Partnership
Altered Vs'second-eUss matter November 11th, 1936, at the
Post Office, Burnsville, North Carolina, under the act of
March 3, 1679. 7
Through This
Preacher’s HKk
Study Window -
fll mb m
1). B. Alderman, Pastor
Burnsville Methodist Church /
Children have so much to:
teach us in this hour. Too;
many times we do not take
time to interpret their thou-j
ghts and acts' into real mean-j
ing and applications. We so/
often forget that in all little)
children are sacred rights and
claims of humanity in resid
ence. v
I have two daughters and
one is a four-year-old. As
others, she “often conies out
with a great thought. She has
always been a “Daddy girl”.
Along with being a daddy girl
she has also been a great tease
with joy of her mother’s.
This morning her mother
asked her. “Whose girl are
you?” And she immediately
gave her answer, “I am dad
dy’s girl". Then her mother
asked, “Aren’t you a little-bit
mine?” Her answer was, “I am
a little-bit inside your girl, and
„ all outside daddy’s girl.”
It was said of Christ, ac
cording to St. Matthew, that
“he called to him a little child
and set him in the midst of
1
V
J^j^&lßjj?-j|? msfjy ■'"' jfl
IKE’S DATE WITH U.S. N EARING—Gen. Dwight Eisen
hower continues his round of European farewells with visit
to Queen Elizabeth and Prime Minister Churchill.
“Ike” and wife Mamie are seen leaving London by air for re
turn to Paris. General is due in U. S. June 1 to seek Republi
can presidential nomination.
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. them.” That child, according
to Jesus, had lots to teach 1
them. And he still has lots to
teach us today. I
I know a lot of people who
/ call themselves Christians
| that are Christians like my
little girl is a mother’s girl.
Just a little-bit inside belongs
to God, and all the outside be
longs to the world.
Then the other point in the
story is also prevalent today. 1
We have a lot of people who
act like Christians on the out-+
side and on the inside are not. ■
They are the ones who have a
special face and special cloth
es to wear on “Meeting Days.”j
I will ask this question: “What
are you going to wear on
THAT MEETING DAY?”
Let’s he a Christian like the
little boy said about his dead
dog. “I had a little dog, and
his name was Dover. When he
died, he died all over.” When
we die to the old sinful life,
let’s die to it all over. Be a
whole-life, dedicated child to
God.
if***-************-********
POETRHIIKR
lAationa/ Idftyue srfnteracan
yfomen
POIGNANT PARTING
Oh, I shall leave these stead
fast hills,
Where beauty rises to the sky
And I shall go to the singing
sea,
The glimmering coast and
white gull’s cry. -
Oh, 1 have on these high
hills,
With far flung gaze the hori
zon scanned,
But I shall go to the singing
sea,
Faint harbor lights and broad
white sand.
The wind is soft on the hills
in spring,
On tiptoe I can almost reach
the moon,
But 1 shall go to the singing
| sea,
The high gale and wild cry of
the loon.
Marie Halbert King
(Poetry for this Corne
should be sent direct to Editl
Deaderick Erskine, Weaver
ville, JV. C.)
********************+***
CIVIL SERVICE EXAMINA
TION ANNOUNCED
A Civil Service examination
for appointment to the posi
tion of Trainee Assistant Bank
Examiner with the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation
is now open, it was stated to
day by Ashton Ramsey, Secre
tary of the Board of U. S. Civ
il Service Examiners at the
Local Post Office. Persons in
terested in being considered
for positions to be filled im
mediately should have their
applications on file not later
than June 1, 1952,
The appointments carry an
entrance salary of $.3,410, per
annum, and are for duty in the]
Fourth Federal Deposit Insur
ance Corporation District, em*’
bracing the States of Mary
land, North Carolina, Souib
Carolina, Virginia and West
Virginia, and the District of
Columbia.
Further information and ap
plication forms may be obtain
ed from any office of the Civil
Service Commission, from first
and second-class post offices,
or from the Executive Secre
tary, Board of U. S. Civil Ser
vice Examiners, Federal De
posit Insurance Corporation.
200 Bank of Virginia Building,
4th and Grace Streets, Rich
mond 19, V’irginla.
CARD OF THANKS
We wish to express our ap
preciation for the kindness
shown us during the illness
and death of our husband and
father.
.’ Mrs. Sally Kate Butner and
family. , -
Local 4-H Club Members Wil
Attend Camp Next Month
T. S. Godwin, assistant farm
agent, said this week that 4-H
Club members from this coun
.ty will attend Camp Schaub,
new 4-H Club camp construct
ed near Waynesville, from
•June .30 through July 5.
The local members will at
tend the camp at the same
time members from Clay,
Cherokee and Macon will at
tend, Godwin said.
Canvpers will be instructed
in swimming, handicraft, the
use of electricity on the farm
and in the home a» well as in
other recreational activities.
Last year 22 boys and girls
attended the camp from this
county and it is expected that
number will be exceeded this
year.
Mr. Godwin said those ex
pecting to attend the camp
this year should contact him
in th§ near future.
Ml YANCEY RECORD
Across
ideoi from other editors
Thousands of readers of weekly 1
,i?wspapers have wondered fror/i I
time to time why their local pubH- i
cation's editorial page sometim. s. 1
becames a vapid page of words j i
T'-'-ard A. Swank, editor of the t i
Uuncannon Record, Duncanno’’, i
Pa., gives his explanation in an ed' i
torial entitled, 'You Gotta Starve » I
Little.’ Writes Editor Swank:
"Several self-appointed lasi
masters have called our attention
to an increasing lack of editorials
from the publisher of this paper.
They have assumed, and they are
partly right, that he has become an
idler, a ne’er-do-well, a slacker, and
a postponer. Several great events
have stirred the community, the
state of the nation, with no outburst
from him. Has he gone to sleep?
"For the past several weeks more
and more of the editorial chores
have been delegated to younger and
more spirited members of the staff.
The grist from their mill has been
exceedingly fine ground. The pub- l
lisher has nc '•omplaint. But readers .
are never content unless they can
be assured the machine is plunging
along with all cylinders moving— )
even the boss should be working.
y ‘Tt has come to the place where
even the hired help is wondering
why the typewriter doesn’t clack in
in a more laxativious manner. So ■
an explanation. I
"To write editorials you gotta :
starve a little. We don’t mean you 1
must wither away from lack of <
food, nor dry up from thirst. But i
rather that you can never be con- 1
.rv*jL;-fcjy i
' jus
'Hit : • I 1
m T j
IN SHADOW OF DEATR , 1
CHARGE — Canadian goyej-fi-
I ment at Ottawa studies plac-, |
ing of treason charge—with
death AS possible penalty—
against Dr. James Endicott,
former United Church miss
ionary, His offense is accusing
United Nations of waging
germ warfare in Korea,
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tent with everything that is fed you '
by the great public organizations
that assume the responsibility ol
telling you how each and . every
part of your daily life should anc
must be lived. In other words, any
person who crosses you, or who ,
tells you what you must do—with
him you must be mad. cussing mad
"Good editorials, at least the
kind we'd like to write, must
gush forth from wells buried
deep and only tapped when irri
tated by the general and collec
tive cussedness of the rest of the
human race. Until you can be
touched just there, and bitterly
hard, you might as well relax and
take things as they come and en
joy the passing of the season and
the quiet nights and the vapid
vapors that arise from light
novels, lighter movies and radio
television that promises to be
come a wisp of nothing.
“That's why we haven’t bee*
writing stirring messages of con
tempt, sentences of destruction and
paragraphs of poop. We’re waiting
until we starve a little, Just a litth
more.’’
• • •
Our Mistakes
From the pen of an unidentified
western country editor: “If yoR
find any mistakes in this paper con
sider them put there for your bene
fit. We know that some people’s
only fun comes from, looking for
them, and always trv to include a
few to make them happy.”
BRADSHAW ATTENDS
FARM MANAGEMENT
SCHOOL
A specialized course i n
scientific farm management
feeding and sanitation practi
ces for a selected group of
men from Purina feed stores
got under way recently at the
Albemarle Hotel in Albemarle,
Glen Bradshaw, local feed
salesman, is among those en
rolled in the course which will
include four more sessions in
addition to assigned field pro
jects in this area.
Conducted by the Ralston 1
Purina Company for the pur- <
pose of training these men to 1
help farmers in their poultry ]
and livestock operations, the 1
council emphasized, in the !
first session, the importance 1
’of farm management and the i
need for anima) and poultry
disease coptrof. ]
Upon successful completion
of the course, Bradshaw wil)
be a Graduate Feeding Advis
or, qualifying him to work
closely With farmers in their
production’ programs,
Mrs. Hubert Justice’s first
grade and Mrs. Doris Geouge’a
third grade of Micaville scho
ol were entertained by Robin
son’s Dairy at Newdale Tues
day morning. The children, ap
proximately 60, were served
ice cream and milk shakes and
were taken through the plant.
‘ • _ u . , . ■ ! -
IN MEMORY
It was on this day our hearts were sad,
When the angels called our Dad.
Oh, these lonely year 8 we’ve spent,
With broken hearts and no content.
Our family sad, to think today,
He left us here so alone and blue,
With all our sorrows to go through.
But we’re so glad that Mother dear
Is still with us, and, oh, 3o near.
In memory of Father (John Fox)
- By Mrs. Otis Proffitt
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THURSDAY, MAY 82, 1962
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