TRINITY EPISCOPAL CHURCH
The Rev. Thomas Droppers
Meeting at Trinity Rectory on Phifer Road
SUNDAYS 10:00 A. M.-Family Service.
Holy Communlon-lst and 3rd Sundays.
Morning Prayer—2nd and 4th Sundays.
Sermon and Sunday School.
WEDNESDDAYS 7:00 A. M.
Holy Communion.
HOLY DAYS 10:00 A. M.
Holy Communion.
PARK GRACE CHURCH 07 THE
NAZARENE
REV. EGBERT PITTS, Paster
Supt., Raymond Gregory
•unda v School 10:00.
Morning Worship 11 a. m.
Young People's service »
CHESTNUT REDtSE BAPTIST
W. L. (Dels Thornburg, Pastor
SUNDAY:
9:45 a. m Sunday 8chool.
11:00 a. m. Worship Swlea.
•:15 p. m. BTU Meeting.
7:30 p. m. Evening Worship.
WEDNESDAY:
7:30 p. m. Pray sr Service.
MIDVIEW BAPTIST CHURCH
(Near Morrison Airport)
Rev. William 1. Jonas, Pastor
Sunday School 8:49.
Evangelistic Service 7:00.
Morning Worship 11:00.
Supt «- Leo Walker.
Saturday Evening Service 7:30.
Mid-Week Prayer Service Wednesday a
Y:00 p. b.
CQKN1TH .-aiMlTIVE CHURCH
ELDER k. R. SIMPSON. Pastor
Preaching Serv
Urn Sunday 2 p. IB.
Third Sundays 11 a. as.
Prayer meeting 7:30 a at
VIHST WESLEYAN METHODIST CHURCH
J. W. Phillips Pastor
Sunday:
m 8:46 A. M. Sunday SchooL N. H. Rally.
U:00 A. M. Morning Worship.
•NX) P. M. Children’s Service.
7:00 P. M. Evening Worship.
Wednesday:
•:*0 A. M. Prayer service.
7:80 P. M. Prayer Service.
PA1TH RAPmt CHURCH
In Burlington community
WALTER PLAY PAYNE. Pastas
_ R. navis, Supt
■uaday School — 9:45.
Moaning Worship — 11:00.
Evening Service — 7.-00.
Wednesday night:
prayer S-rvlees — 7:00.
BID on Sundays — 8:45.
Pastor
FIRST CHURCH OP_
REV. B. J. ES3ABY,
Sunday School: 8:4b a. m.
Wesley Moss, Supt
Morning Worship: 11N10 a. m.
Young People s Society at 8*0 p. a
Evangelistic Services at 7*0 e. m.
CENTRAL METHODIST CHURCH
Rev. Hubert Garmon, Pastor
SMB—Sunday School.
Una)—Meming Worship
6:30—intermediate Methodist Youth Fei
iowshlp.
6:30—Senior Methodist Youth Fellowship
Midweek Prayer Service remains at 7:3
aa Wednesday evenings.
WESLEYAN METHODIST CHURCH
E. GOLD STREET
Bev. CIyde R.' Goodson, Pastor
Sunday School 9:45.
Morning Worship 1. :00,
Evangelistic Service 7 p. m.
7 Pw’mT meeUn® Wednesday evening a
MACEDONIA RAPTOT'CHUHCH
Dr. R Eugene Poston, Interim Pastor
Charles Alexander, Supt
Sunday:
8:45—Sunday School.
14*0—Morning Worship.
6:00—Baptist n'—■
7*8—1
-Baptist Training Union.
-Preaching Service. .
and Teachers meeting.
7:08—Mid-Week Prayer service.
MOUNTAIN VIEW BAPTIST
REV. FLOYD BOILER. Pastor
__ Camp, Supt"
Crowd en Mountain Community
10:06 Sunday School.
Morning Service.
7:30 Evening Service.
—7:00 P. M.
MISSIONARY METHODIST CHURCH
Sunday School a .45 a. m. •
Mar nil.- Wer» x
Evening Worship Sunday night at
p. nu~
Thursday night prayer jneetlng at 7
Sunday School—8:45 A.M
Morning Worship—UuOffjLM.
routhFellow.hlp Grot ^
■Toning Worship—7:00 ran.
Prayer Service—Wednesday—7.-00 P.M.
01011 Sehe<lr>al—Wednesday_1
Tenth Choir Rehearsal—Thursday—T*
105 P.M.
r
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
SCHEDULE OF SERVICES:
Sunday School: 9.45 A. M.
Morning Worship Service: 11:00 A. ML
Training Union: 7:00 P. M.
Evening Worship Service: 8:00 P. M.
Wednesday Evening Prayer Service 7:00 P
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Paul K. Ausley. Th.D.. Minister
Sunday—
9:45 Sunday School
UKX> Morning Worship. (Nursery to
Ke-school children during services.)
6:30 Senior High Fellowship.
6:30 Pioneer Fellowship.
Monday—
7:30 Boy Scouts.
Wednesday—
3:30 Girl Scout Troop 4.
4:30 Junior Choir.
7:30 Mid-week Prayer Service.
8:00 Chancel Choir.
Thursday—
3:30 Brownie Scouts.
3:45 Touth Choir.
Friday
s' A A Meeting.
_ Leonard Huftstatler, .
Sunday School at 10 o’clock a.
Morning Warship at 11 o’clock a.
Methodist Youth r
Fellowship at 6 p.
Evening Service at 7 p. m.
PIEDMONT BAPTIST CHURCH
James E. Williams, Pastor
8unday:
9:45 a. m.—Sunday School.
11:00 — Morning Worship.
6:15 — Baptist Training Union.
7:15 — Evening Service.
Wednesday:
THE TABERNACLE OF LOVE
On 2nd. Street
H. W. Whitfield, Pastor
Supt. Sunday School: David Houser.
Sunday School 10 a. m.
Worship Service 11 a. m. and 7:30 p. m
Wednesday night and Saturday night ser
vice 7:30 p. m.
Singing every 4th Sunday 2:30 p. m.
SECOND BAPTIST CHURCH
120 Llnweod Drive
Albert K. Hastings, Pastor
Sunday School at 9:45 a. m. — W. E
data*, Supt.
Training Union 6:30 p. m. — Gene Cham
pion. Dir.
MCRing Worship 11:00 a. m. — Normal
King. Music Dir.
Evening Worship 7:45 p. m. — also Mid
week Prayer Service.
Bible Study at 7:45 p. m.
“Big enough to accommodate —
enough to appreciate.”
MANUEL HOTLINE S3 CHURCH
2nd Street Cora Mill
Pastor, Hot. Eumneoss Dixon
Sunday School 10 o’clock a. m.
Preaching 11 o’clock.
C.Y.S. Meeting 6:30 Sunday Night
evangelistic Service 7:30 p. m.
Prayer Services 7:30 p. m. Tuesday
Crowders Mountain Community
REV. JAMES AVEY. Pastor
Wednesday and Saturday:
7:80 p. n. Prayer Meeting.
Sunday:
9:45 a. m. Sunday ScnoaL
11:00 a. m. Morning Worship
8:00 a m. Junior Meeting.
8:00 p. m. Young People's me
fJO p. m. Evangelistic Service.
sapnsT
HOLDER.
OAK GROVE
Her. JAMES
Sunday:
10:00—Sunday School
11:00—Morning Worship
aoratng.
7:00—BTU.
8:00—Evening worship
Thursday: -
7:00—Prayer
each Sunday
WESTOVER BAPTIST CHURCH
Rev. J. D. McClellan. Pastor
C. S. Owen*, Supt.
9:45 Sunday School.
11:00 Morning Worship.
6:00 P. M. Baptist Training Union.
7:00 Evening service.
Wednesday night prayer service 7:00k
SMS MOUNTAIN TABERNACLE
(Located on Third Street)
James W. Self. Pester
Sunday School—11) a.m.
Preaching Service—11 a. us.
Night Service—7:15 p.m.
Saturday Night Prayer Meeting—7:15 p.
v PATTERSON GROVE
BAPTIST CHURCH
Hev. Fred Hicks, Pastor
Sunday School Supt. — Edwin Moore
Sunday:
10:00 — Sunday School.
ll:00Momlng Worship services.
7:00 — Baptist Training Union.
S-— — Evening service.
Wednesday:
7:80 — Midweek prayer service.
DIXON PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
Sunday—
9:30 A. M. — Morning Worship
10:30 A. M. — Sunday School
6:30 P. M. — Youth Fellowship at St
Ioh church.
William L. Pregsly, Minister
Church School 10 a. m.
N. V McGUi, Jr., Supt.
Morning Service 11 r. m.
A sermon to the Mothers will be prea
ched by the minister.
6:30 Young People will meet.
6:30 Juniors and Intermediate meeting.
7:00 Youth choir rehearsal.
7:30 Evening Worship.
3:00 Tuesday Cub ScSuts.
7:30 Wednesday Prayer and Praise ser
vice.
8:00 Wednesday Chancel choir rehearsal.
You enter our churches "not as a stran
ger, but as a guest of God.” Come and
worship with us.
BETHLEHEM BAPTIST CHUBCK
Rev. Norman F. Brown. Pastor
Morning Service 11 a. m.
Sunday School each Sunday at 10 a. m
Baptist Training Union 7:00 p. m.
Evening Worship 8:00 p. m.
m 'd 8 aapuas JaXuid w3jn /CepsaupsM
CAMP CHEEK BAPTIST CHUHCH
Billy Guyton. Paster
Sunday School—10 a m.
Preaching Service—11 a m.
Night Service—7:10 p.m.
Saturday Night Prayer Meeting—7:10 p.m
EL BETHEL METHODIST CHUHCH
IEV. P. E. BLALOCK
Sunday School—10 a. m.
Morning worship—11 a. m.
MYF and evening worship—7 p. K.
Wednesday:
Prayer meeting—7 p. m.
CHUHCH OF GOD
Rev. L. L. McDaniel, Pastor
Sunday School 10 A. M.
Worship Service 11 A. M.
Evangelistic Service 7:15 P. M.
YPE Saturday at 7:30 P. M.
KINGS MOUNTAIN BAPTIST
Bev. M. D. DuBose, Pastor
Worship Service 9:40 a. m. Sunday*.
Sunday School 10:45 a. m. Sundays.
Prayer Service 7:30 p. m. Tuesda
sights.
ALLEN MEMOBiAL BAPTIST CHUHCH
Rev. Wray Barrett, Pastor
10:00 Sunday School.
11:00 Morning Wi '
7:00 Baptist
evening church
Wednesday:
7:00 Mid-week prayer services.
followed by
Second Street
BEV. LYNN OIHL Pastor
Sunday School, 10 a. m.
Worship Service 11 a. m.
Evening Service. 7:15 p. m.
Prayer Service every Thursday at T:l«
CHEHOKEE ST. BAPTIST CHUHCH
' Bev. George Leigh, Pastor
William Dorsey, Supt.
10 :Q0 Sunday school.
11:00 Morning worship.
7:00 Evening worship.
7:00 Wednesday Prayer meeting.
TEMPLE BAPTIST CHUBCH
Rev. Jack D. Weaver, Pastor
Paul Ledford, Superintendent
Training Union Director, H. H. Hilliard
Sunday School 9:45 a. m.
Morning Worship 11 a. m.
B. T. U. 6:30 p. m.
Midweek Prayer Service Wednesday 7:30
>. m.
Evening Worship 7:30 p. m.
EAST SO»& BAPTIST CHUBCH
9:4b a. m. —Sunday SeboaL Ealpb John
<°U:0O^-Mornlng worship
6:30—Baptist Training Unlca
7:30—Evening worship
ffednaeday:
T^O—Mid-week prayer servlet
Brotherhood meeting each third TLurs
lay evening In the month at 7:00 p. m.
DAVID BAPTIST
Highway 74
BEV. H. S. HABDIN.
Gene Hoyle Supt.
10:00 Sunday School
11:00 Morning Worship
7:00 p.m. B.T.U., BUI
Director
Babb Gann
The Lord's Supper each fifth Sunday
• laid to Hobab, ‘'Come the*
"Gone
vlth us, and w# wiu do the* good."
The food consumed by the av
erage family in the U. S. amounts
to two and a half tons a year,
according to World Book Ency
clopedia. The sum includes 405
pounds of milk and cream, 144
pounds of meat, 433 pounds of
vegetables, 263 pounds of cereals,
and 166 pounds of fruit
Korea covers an area only
slightly larger than the state of
Utah, but it has'more than 42
times as many people, according
to World Book Encyclopedia.
Drownings account for 15 per
ent of all fatal farm accidents.
ENTIRE STOCK
LADIES WOOL
TOPPERS
and
SUITS
Price
PLONK BROTHERS sCoD
urn. waumiu
At Meeting
The Board of Directors of Boys
Home of North Carolina met on
Sunday, May 1, in Lake Wacca
maw with the Chairman J. San
ders Dallas of High Point, pre-■
siding.
The meeting was well attended
and the directors w£re enthusias
tic in their remarks on the tre
mendouse progress Boys Home
has made in the past year. Sever
al of the directors who have been
on the board since Boys Home
was started, expressed gratifica
tion in seeing all that has been
accomplished since the property
at Lake Waoeamaw was purchas
ed in 1936.
Lions Cottage at Boys Home,
Which will provide facilities, for
sixteen more boys, is now under
construction and will be com
pleted about July 1. This cottage
will toe occupied between July 15
and August 1 so that the boys
will be ready to start the 1960
fall school term.
While the completion of Lions
Cottage will provide a home for
sixteen boys, the board relaizes
the immediate need of another
cottage to care for boys on the
“waiting list.” The directors are
studying ways and means to
start construction of the third
cottage at Boys Home when
Lions Cottage is completed. It is
hoped that the erection of this
cottage can begin in the summer.
Upon completion of the third
cottage the board expects to have
ready plans and means to pro
ceed with the construction of a
Vocational - Recreational Build
ing. This building will make pos
sible work shop activities and ad
ditional recreational facilities. I
At the conclusion of the meet
ing, the directors with their wiv
es and guests, enjoyed a “dutch”
luncheon with the boys in Civitan
Cottage.
Those directors attending the
meeting other than Chairman
Dallas were: Judge B. Gordon
Gentry, Greensbocp; W. D. Wel
ch, Jr., Washington; Dr. W. H.
Hoskins, Whiteville; Fred L
Swartzberg, High Point; Stacy
Jesus of Nazareth i
Did Not Invent
Organized Cult
The insistent question that j
underlies all organized Chris-: j
tianity is one of the personal j
relationship of men and women I
to the Christ—Jesus of Galilee of j
the New Testament.
To what extent does His ex- j
ample and His teaching domi
nate their lives? Does the love j
that He enjoined in the two !
great commandments show up
in the outlook of these people—
in their daily lives and conduct?
These two commandments: to
love God with all the heart and
soul and mind, and to love one’s
neighbor as one’s self are not,
of course, limited to the Chris- '
tian religion.
They were not inventions of
the Master, but a basic part of
the Jewish religion and of the
law of the prophets which, Jesus
said, He had come to fulfill, not]
to destroy.
In one sense, Jesus was not
the founder of Christianity. He
was not the originator as others
have been founders of cults or
religions.
If one looks deeply into the
life, teaching and mission of
Jesus one finds that what the
Gospels show is not a religion,
but a religion in all its essence
and basis in God’s relation to
man and man’s relation to God
and the relation of men to each
other.
The religions world of Jesus,
like the world of the universe in
which we live, is a world of
spiritual facts and laws. It is not
a world in which there is any
thing artificial or invented.
Budd, Sanford; D. L. Todd, Whi
teville; Mrs. John (M. Council,
Lake Waocamaw; Mrs. Aubrey
Mauney, Kings Mountain; R. G.
Maultsby, Charlotte; E. A. Sice
ioff, Lexington; W. Crowell
Black, Whiteville; Raleigh E.
Dingman, High Point. Also pres
ent: David Saunders, Belmont;
R- N. McCray, Director of Boys
Home, Lake Waocamaw; Mrs.
Betty Neilson, Lake Waocamaw;
Mrs. George Gold, Whiteville.
Drip-dry, little-care fabric is used for airy summer dress at left with full skirt. Skirt is circled
by bands of white lace and embroidery. Certain to make summer even more pleasant is the
little sleeveless dress with its own jacket, right. The cap sleeve has given way to this look in
the jacket-dress. Both fashions by Jeanne d'Arc.
Every year, summer gains in
importance as a fashion season.
This is probably due to the fact
that spring seems to have van
ished in some part of the coun
try. At any rate, there seems to
be mord summer weather and in
turn, this means a larger ward
robe.
This year, when you shop for
summer fashions, you’ll find the
dress with the little sleeve. But
you’ll also find the sleeveless
dress with the little Jacket For
BY EDNA MILES
women have found this an un
Dentable combination for hot
summer weather and air condi
rioning. It takes care of both.
Though most of us favor slim
skirts in the spring, with the be
ginning of hot weather we want
;he comfort of full, airy skirts.
So they’re with us this year in
nany versions. Some are tiered,
;ome arc pleated and some are
rust wide.
Sheer coats are coming in for
summer and they'll be most wel
come. They’re designed to fill
that gap when a wrap is needed
on a warm summer evening.
There are lots of fabrics that
are easily cared for, thus cutting
the amount of time you need
spend washing and ironing in the
hot weather. These include
Dacron-and - cotton blends,
printed, checked or plaid cottons,
plus the many drip-dry fabrics.
I * f
COSTUME
Jewelry
SI to $3
plus taxes
NYLON
Hose
Give her a box
$1 to $129
LINGERIE
by
ARTEMIS
MISS ELAINE
Cool cottons and da
cron - Nylon - Cotton
combinations.
WALTZ LENGTH
SLIPS
HALF-SLIPS
SLEEP COATS
BABYDOLL
PAJAMAS
$195
to
$195
t
GIVE HER
Dresses
t
Many famous-name
lines. Her favorite
colors and styles.
$8.95
to
$27JO
BAGS
Every Mother Needs hand
bags — She'll like ours.
&95to$4.95
Plus tax
, GLOVES
White and Colors
SI to SMS
BIG NEW SHIPMENT
HATS
Just unpacked
$195 to $758
Bedroom Slippers - New iwread- $3.99
Gilt
Wrapping
FREE!