Newspapers / The Yancey Journal (Burnsville, … / March 4, 1965, edition 1 / Page 2
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THE YANCEY RECORD THURSDAY, MARCH 4, 1965 THE YANGEY RECORD BriaHKAsJ Wr, im TRENA P. POX. Editor A Publisher THURMAN L. BROWN, Shop Man a gar PUBLISHED EVERT THURSDAY BY YAN CRY PUBLISHING COMPANY Sacond . Class Postage Paid at BurnsvlUe, N. C. THURSDAY. MARCH 4, 1*65 NUMBER TWENTY-EIGHT SUBSCRIPTION RATES *.59 PER YEAk TWO MINUTES WITH THE BIBLE ■* BY CORNEUUB R. ST AM PRES. BEREAN BIBLE SOCIETY " CHICAGO 35, ILLINOIS BIRTH, DEATH and REBIRTH St. Pefccx declares that to ob tain eternal life we must be born again, since by nature we were bom but to die. “Being born again, not of corrup-! tlble seed, but of incorrutlble, by the Word of God, which liveth and abideth forever. For all flesh Is as grass, and «U the glory of man as the flower of grass. The grass withereth and the flower thereof falkth aw.ay. But the Word of the Lord endureth for ever, and this is the Word which by then gospel is preached unto you” (1:23-25). Our Lord emphasized this same fact to the Pharisee Nicodemus. “That which is bom of the flesh,”. He said, ‘‘is flesh. : . . Marvel | not that I said unto thee, ye must be bom again” (John 3:6, 7). was devoutly rellgi Regional Library Adds Important New Fiction Works By: Ashton Chapman A number of absorbing works of fiction have recently been ac quired by the Avery-Mltchell-Yan e:y library. They include such titles as: HURRY SUNDOWN by K. B. Gil den. Its basic plot Is the strug gle between the small-farm own ers In South and a greedy land syndicate, but all sorts of other things enter into the story—envy love, racial prejudice, pride and hatred. a THE NEW GIRL by Elsie Sna gulnetti. At once a funny and affectionate picture of life in a girls’ boarding school and recol lection of the small Southern town ’where the heroine begins to take leave of childhood and enter the world of adults. OLD HICKORY by Noel Ger tram Gerson. The author has translated historical fact Into exciting literature as he vividly you; :; jms in America m\ usings' bonHSips • ITS AMAZING! WAS THU FIRSY , § METAL EMPLOYEO It) MAKE COWS' ■f YHEV ORIGINATED IN THE meoterraneam DISTRICT ABOUT , AND WERE CHEFU/ USED p-TtD Rqy SOLDIERS WAGES. / 'l9fel, HALIFAX. MOI/^sSfiA ous, and he even recognized Christ as “a taacher come from! God” (John 3:2). But he was not saved. He had not been “born of the Spirit,” and “that which is ' born of the flesh is flesh, even though It is rligious flesh, and must die. Nicodcimus, like many •incerely religious people today, needed to be bom again—of the Spirit, by faith in the Wool, of which the Spirit is the Author. Some suppose that Paul did not teach the new birth, but they are wrong. Hei taught it consist ently, and nowhere more clearly than in Titus 3:5, wh:re he wrote by divine inspiration: “Not by works of righteousness I which wei have done, but accord ! ing to His mercy He saved us, by the washing of regeneration (re birth) ad renewing of the, Holy Spirit. chronicles the events of Andrew Jackson’s long and dramatic life. TITUBA by Ann Petry. A novel laid in Salem, Mass., during the witch trials of 1962, an epteode in American history which writers of both fact and fiction have ten ded to neglect. P. S. WILKINSON by D. C. B. Bryan. The Harper Prize Novel for 1963. It is a work of singular candor, subtlety and strength. FULL FATHOM FIVE by John Steward Carter. This novel has that quality common to all great fiction, the creation of time as a physical reality into which the reader enters. Through the par-, rator’s remembrance of things past, his reader comes to know the “continuing present.” AS SOUNDING BRASS by Alan T. Nelson. Based on a true hap-1 P e ning. this novel is a devasting look Into the human heart. KATE AND EMMA by Monica i Dickens. Nobody who reads this 1 novel will ever- be able to learn 1 of cruelty to children from a news paper, turn the page and thrust it out of mind as just another i news it im. The book Is not only 1 wonderful reading; it is barb to ’ the conscence which has be. n LOWDOM gAKfR'/, oOMogp our W THC ' Bwrj.sewfiPis MOTIC6 To PU. rrs customers: -fleas DeLfivm , fiVfAry ACTION !" U \ O' /7H OMAHA, NEBRASKA, ra * UMeflrß*«R ADVERTISED /K HIS SERVICES >4. PAPER,-THOSLV:- ■ask-nose WW/tpEMm,, HRVS Sfigv ' 1 ' - needed tor a long time. LAST CALL by Angus Wilson. | This is a comedy wherein a crumbling class structure has thrown up new barriers of saotr bery and pretense, and where the old are as likely to bei out siders as thei very young. THE SEA FLOWER by Ruth Moore. This is a story ot ft houseboat, in which two y oungs ters are cast away on an (almost) deserted island. They meet a hatch of characters who quickly bring the plot to a full boil. BUCKO by Cliff Farrell. This is a new, somewhat different, ; Western which should appeal strongly to lovers of this type of ( fiction. - Suspense novels recently ac quired include A COVENANT } WITH DEATH by Stephen Becker; THE CASE OF THE TROUBLED TRUSTEE, a Perry Mason mys tery by Erie ;Stanley Gardner and THE LATE BRIDE, Theodora Dußois’ sixth and perhaps best' mystery. Recent children’s books Include EYES SO-BIC by Lisle Well; | children in a Portugese fishing , ] village encounter the “Good Luck I Lady”. STUBBY PRINGLE’S CHRISTMAS by Jack Schaefer; a story perfect for reading aloud when the family Is gttheresd to gether. IT’S TIME HOUR by Elizabeth Sechrist and Janette Woolsey; here, in respon se to the neod for better stories to read and tell, is a collection chosen with loving care by two of America’s best-known -editors and librarians of children’s litera ture. WHITE STALLIONS OF LEPIZZA by Marguerite Henry: beautifully illustrated. KING AR THUR AND THE KNIGHTS OF THE ROUND TABLE retold by Emma Geldexs and Barbara Lind sey. THE MERRY ADVENTURES OF ROBIN HOOD by Howard Pyle illustrated in color MONTHLY REPORT The following vouchers were issued;" From General Fund. $6,196.35. - T'- I, Grace M. Ayers, R.gister of Deeds of the County of Yancey and State, of North N. C. do certify I that the above statement is true, and correct copy of the minutes of the meeting held on March 1. 1965 by the Yanc:y County Board of County Commissioner. Witness my hand and seal this 2 day of March, 1965. CARD OF THANKS Th;: recent bereavement which has visited our home has brought i to us a greater appreciation of . our friends.. Such kindness and neighborly thoughtfulness can . n:,ver be forgotten. Mrs. L. E. Hall and Family REMOVE WARTS! 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The Yancey Journal (Burnsville, N.C.)
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March 4, 1965, edition 1
2
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