DR. HUGH S. LANIEL, JR. Dr. Daniel Is Named To Alumni Post Dr. Hugh S. Daniel, Jr., a Waynesville optometrist, has been named to the Advisory Council of the Appalachian State Teachers College Alumni Association by President Leroy Sossamon of Bryson City. Dr. Daniel replaces Gene Wike of Asheville, whose term of office has expired. Sossamon said that Dr. Dan iel will serve on the council with Garnet Clark, Winston Salem; Hark David, Hickory; A. H. Felton, Garner; Dr. Fran cis Hoover, Boone; E. G. Lackey, Winston-Salem; John Nantz, Greensboro; Jack Park, Charlotte; Ralph Sinclair, Trout man; Jack Ruffing Greens boro; Ray Walker, Sparta; and Charles Walters, Shelby. Dr. Daniel, who has been at Waynesville since 1948, is a na tive of Franklinton, N. C. and is a 1943 graduate of ASTC. He served in the Army during World War II and attended the Southern College of Optometry in Memphis, Tenn. Dr. Daniel's wife, the former Ruby Donald, was a member of the Appalachian faculty in the 1940's. Dr. Daniel is active in civic and church life. In 1961 he re ceived the Lions Club Man of the Year award in Waynesville. He is a member fo the Citizens Committee fo Better Schools, the Chamber of Commerce and the Waynesville Recreation Development Commission. Cur rently he is president of the Way nesville Golf Club and is a past president of the Waynes ville Recreation Commission and the Hazelwood PTA. Also, he holds a rather un usual job in his work as presi dent of the western district Ap palachian Alumni Chapter. Rather than being in charge of the activities of alumni in only one county, the Waynes ville optometrist coordinates the activities of alumni scat tered over a 13?ounty area in western North Carolina. The western district chapter was presented a trophy for hav ing the highest percentage of attendance by members on roll during the 1960-61 year. Farm Tax Guide Being Offered According to John E. Wall, district director, Internal Rev enue Service, Greensboro, farm ers in this area can get some valuable tips from an official publication of Internal Revenue Service. It's the "Farmer's Tax Guide, 1963 Edition." This booklet, Mr. Wall said, is available at no cost from the Internal Revenue Service or ag ricultural agents. Jerry Coe ?b?ut this question: "Hunting season is here again. I want insurance on my guns and equipment? also liability coverage in case I injure someone ? and acci dent insurance for the sea son to cover personal injur ies to myself. Can your ag ency fill the bill on all this insurance?" COE INSURANCE CO. Phone AM 4-W k PARALYZED MAN BAGS DEER Harrisville, W. Va. ? A jew eler, Ted Cox followed his usu al good luck and bagged a deer on the opening day of the hunt ing season. Cox hunts from a wheel chair because his legs are paralyzed from an accident. He has gotten 3 deer in the last 4 years. Trees Can Aid Or Hurt Landscape Scheme Tree* are certainly the most important feature of any home garden u far as decoration i? concerned. They are the back ground but are most often treat ed quite haphazardly. People sometimes forget that trees have the power to make any house look permanent or temp orary. There 1* a strong temptation for people who build new houM< on bare land to plant too many trees and these too eloce together. They don't take into consideration that, by doing this, they are defeating the very purpose for which the tree* were planted. That is, to grow and provide ornament and shade in the yard. The beet and safeat thing for a person who is thinking of in vesting money in several trees for the yard or thinking of cut ting down any tree already (rowing in the yard ir to con sult a tree expert' or buy a food. well-known book on trees and get down to some serious Study on the subject. For example? too many peo ple do not know that there is a great deal of difference be tween a Norway maple and a sugar maple. When the fact* are known ? sugar maple i? much more to be decked be es use It increases in value aa it ages, while a twenty year old Norway maple is nothing more than ? liability. Another thing that should be taken into considers lion is the she the tree being planted will be when full grown, in scale with the sise of the house and property it Is to adorn. On a large property, flower ing treea and large shade trees planted in groups arc very af fective. Where the grounds are small, dwarf fruit trees and shrubs are heat V. S. fighting men maintain a ready force in SI lands. Taste O'Sea Frozen Shrimp Scallop Flounder Fish Cake FISH DINNER 2. Pkos. 99c McKenzie's Field Peas Mixed Vegetables Speckled Butter Beans Crowder or Blackeye Peas Your 24-0*. Choke Pkg. 49c

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