PERSONALS Mrs W. A. Bishop and Miss Edna | Biabop have returned from * visit ' in Macon and Dublin, Ga. Mrs. Homer Stark of Moultrie, Ga. re- ' turned with them and together they went to different points; 1 spent some time at Greys tone Inn around Ashevtlle. They returned home and Miss Bishop, Mrs. Stark j and Miss Phyllis Snyder went to | Berea, Ky. and saw the drama, "The Wilderness Road'. Mr. and Mrs. Ivey Stames and daughter, Vinetta of Lincolnton, visited Dr. and Mrs. W. A. Hoover and family last week. Mrs. Starnes is a sister of Dr. Hoover. Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Case have as | their guest this week. Mrs. Case's j aunt. Mrs. J. M. Highsmith of Robersonville, N. C. Mrs. Kate Shields. Miss Eunicc Shields. Mrs. Maude Gulledge and son, Billy, recently enjoyed a trip through Kentucky. They visited Mammoth Cave, and attended the "Wilderness Road' drama at Berea College. Mrs. Gulledge is a grad uate of Berea College. Meth. Conferentte , Family Wight Set Next Wednesday. Sept. 7 at 6:30 6:30 p. m. the fourth quarterly con ference family night will be held at the First Methodis! Church. The Rev. Jack Huneycutt, dis trict superintendent, will preside at the conference. Reports of the past year's work will be made the new budget will be adopted and new church officers will be elected. North Carolina burley tobacco growers led all other states in the percentage of favorable votes in the burley tobacco referendum re cently. Andrews Youths J Leave For Study !< A large number of Andrews atuO dents are planning to leave this | week for various colleges and oth-.< era are expected to leave next week. They are: Doris Teas, Sullins Coll lege, Bristol, Va. ; Dorcas Ann Mc Guire, Baptist Hospital Training, school. Winston-Salem; Bobbie Conley, Meredith College; James Lunsford, Wake Forest College; Pat Derre berry. Watts School of Nursing, Durham. Also Sue Crawford. Kent Ladd, June Cruse. Dean Truett, Lillian West, Barbara Barton, Charles Thomasson. Charles Freel, Tommy Cooper, Joe Mosteller, Jean Lovin good, Western Carolina College, Cullowhee; Virginia Huffman and Rebecca Babbington, Brevard Col lege, Brevard; Todd Reece and Bobby Cooper. University of North Carolina. Chapel Hill; Zeb Conley, Mars Hill College, Mars Hill; Mary Ruth Gibson, Cleveland College, Cleveland, Tenn., June Thompson Berea. Other members of tfie 55 graduat ing class who are employed in clerical positions include; Lois Breedlove and Josephine Coffey in ( offices in Atlanta, Ga.; Roy and | Peggy Palmer, offices of Sears i Roebuck and Co.. Atlanta. Ga.; and Maxine Mason with the Johnson Auditing Co. in Murphy. A large number of 1955 senior' have won scholarships to various colleges. i Pictures should decorate a wall space, add color, but above all, should be interesting, says Pauline E. Gordon, State College extension housing specialist. /.Oi/e/y ft/? F/nfo/i for your furniture . . .wood and metal trim Pittsburgh SATINHIDE ENAMEL SATINHIDE ENAMEL does the same excellent resurfacing on wood and metal trim and furniture. Vel vet-smooch. easy to apply and easier to clean. Fine for bathrooms and kitchens be cause it's wash able and extra f durable! $130 Quart MURPHY HARDWARE CO Phone 25 PITTSBURGH PftlNTS You'll find there's Something Special in FEE ? * . - ">nX*J<r. 2&e? 4#?</ct4 -ha. /tX^ A. ? - - -/ J /t^JA. / w YOU JAVf Billy Forsyth Is Bit By Polio Billy Forsyth, nine-year-old son >f Mr. and Mrs. W. Prank Forsyth was hit by polio and rushed to the Aaheville Orthopedfc Hospital i round 5 p. m. Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Forsyth are stay ing in Aaheville to be near the hos Hal. North Carolina's 1950 cotton crop has been reduced In value by an es timated $11 million because of re cent storms. Mrs. Goforth, 80 Dies At Culberson Mrs. Barbara Goforth, 80. died at 3:50 p. ra Tuesday, Aug:. 29. in the ( home of a daughter. Mrs. Lena Helton, Culberson. Route S. after a long illness. Mrs. Goforth had been engaged in the mercantile business about 50 years. Surviving, in addition to Mrs. Hel ton, are two other daughters, Mrs. Esther Geisler of Isabella. Tenn. and Miss Rena Goforth of Chicago, III. ; two sons. Theodore Shields of Barberton, Ohio, and Wood row Goforth of Atlanta, Ga. ; two sis ters, Mrs. Sarah Reynolds of Ak ron, Ohio, and Mrs. Margaret SPECIAL SALE ICE CRSAM ALL FLAVORS Qpints 690 at most Bcrden Dealers If iffe TMai, ggt <o b# good! | \Any Small Boy CAN Love Bathing When a little boy can have this much fun in the bathtub, he'll soon realize that cleanliness is a Good Thine! MOST nOl'LTS ENJOY THEIR DAILY TUBBING because it's so relaxing ? and because being clean makes them (eel comfort able and civilized. A little boy. who has no burning interest in being either relaxed or civilized, can hardly be expected to share that point of view. He needs something else to get him into the tub without protest. For a little boy, a bath must be fun. Perhaps the first step toward bath fun is a leisurely approach. If he's dumped in, scrubbed, dried, and dispatched to bed, no li'.tle boy will find it much fun. If he's still being bathed by his mother, it will pay her richly to allow enough time for little jokes and games and for conversations about what he's been up .0 all day. Whi-n a boy is o' i enough to bathe himself, bath-,rne can a ; '?y pen. a w.ici he run? ins steamboat over sudsy ocean \a\ ^ i :? lvt submarine throi'gh sudsy foam. Other fun .???pies can l-e his ov n gaily patterned towels and facecloth, soap, sor:pdi;;h. In such an atm^s^here. you'll find that he'll swallow all-im.i'.ftant idea of cleanliness readily ? if it's spooned ou -??j.'.'r iiv . T.a c? c -.stor oil. (A'.S) iWiss Stcarix Is Folk School Student Miss Susan Swartz of Anticoh College. Yellow Springs, Ohio, is a new student at the John C? Camp bell Folk School in Brasstown. Meanwhile, Miss Sue Flint of Concord, Mass., has returned to her home after studying this sum mer at the folk school. Rice of Mineral Bluff, Ga. 17 grand children, and two great-grand children. Funeral services will be held to day (Thursday) in the Mt. Pleasant Baptist Church at 2 p. m.. with burial in the churcn cemetery. Townson Funeral Htme Is in charge of arrangements. 6 Baptised At Andrews Church Baptismal services were held Sunday evening proceeding the re gular service at the First Baptist church by the Rev. John C. Cor ibitt. pastor of the church. Those baptized were: Barbara Palmer, Laura Jean Weeks, Mar tha Derreberry, Benny Weeks, Charles Oscar HI Van Gorder and Thomas Brooks. Miss Doris Raxter student at Southwestern seminary Fort Worth Texas spoke on Love. U. S. Farm Hocks laid 6.6 bil lion eggs in Marc ? one per cent less than in March last year but three per cent above the 1944 ? S3 average. VALLEY DRIVE-IN, Andrews, N. C. SUN. ? MON., SEPT. 4 - S Jeffrey Hunter aad Jean Peters In a romatic embrace, from 20th OAtnry Fox's "Lure of The Wilderness." Technicolor NBWI ROW SPIBDL "1 BRI " L Q most rowttruL I -MAN CHAW SAWI McCULLOCH _ 73 ] It'* the moat! W YouVe got to try " it to believe it. This new McCulloch 73 weighing only 31 tbc> will outcut your present saw easily. Come in and well prove itl New features on this brand new saw, and a choice of chain speeds. ONLY I Alexander Chain Saw & Equip. Co. Phone IM ) ? Murphy, N. C Burch Motors eg; see bunch r/zsr 24 HOUK WHECKEK SERVICE n <> ?<?kjiU 95 ???MURK , N.c, r ? Boiling Springs C'hurrh Sets Service A home coming and church dedi cation will be held at Boiling Springs Baptist Church on Sunday, Sept. 4. The Rev. Weldon West and Prance Poetell will be In charge of the services. The public is invited to attend. McClnre Bays MfCombs* Guernsey Hoke McClure, of Hayesville, has just purchased the young Guern sey sire. Hazel's Golden Prince ?from McCombs Bros., Murphy, ac cording to the American Guern sey Cattle Club. This young bull Is out of the cow, Hazels Twilight, and is sired by , Shoal Falls Golden Foremost. . Logan, Slagle Go To Leadership Camp Mary Ruth Logan and Bob Slagle recently were chosen to represent Cherokee County at 4-H Leadership camp at Camp Swannanoa. The leadership is a new type of camp held for the first time this year. BIO FUSS Airplanes are becomfng noisier. New jet engines with powerful af terburners generate 150 decibels, i a fury of sound equivalent to 1,500, 000,000 people all taking at at once. Nothing in man's previous exper ience approaches that intensity, says the National Geographic So ciety. 1 STRICTLY FRESH l /""OOD Samaritan in Johannes ) burg, South Africa, turned in a $7000 payroll he found in a black bag. Was rewarded with five shillings (70 cents). If crime doesn't pay, and honesty is its own reward, what DOES pay off? ? ? ? Gal in Paterson, Nj., smashed the car's radio, slashed all four tires and removed both license | plates when her boy friend reO ; fused to take her for a ride* Maybe her feet hurt her. ? ? ? i Vladimir Matskevich, one i the Soviet farm experts tourt.? the United States, said of Tex] ' ans: "Texans are very sly peoplf who don't brag nearly as mu as they could." Even T* ? have to sleep part of the Vladimir. * ? ? ? Hoboken, NJ, police chief that the boy* in the static henceforth mart keep their fa off the desk and slop listening music ca the radio. A fellow < pick up all kinds of Men, wat tag those TV sltuthsi ? ? ? ? Man in Detroit, Mich., tube of the television set to -??, With him every moraine to sa^j electricity. That was bad. Fa bade his wife to have vis' because It wore out the That was worse. Also, ? guests used up ail the coffef! That was too much. Judge founp she had grounds for divorce, r* VALLtl ANDREWS, N. C. Thurm. Fri., Sept. 1-8 Van Johnson-Joanne Dru "The Seige At Red River" Technicolor Sat. Sept. S DOUBLE FEATURE George Montgomery "The Pathfinder" . Technicolor PLUS Ifiw Lominmc la Feted At MMmner MIm Shirley Mutheson entertain ed with a dinner Sunday evening in her home to honor Miss Mackie Lominac on her 17th birthday an niversary. Arragements of late summer flowers were used in decorations and a large birthday cake topped with 17 candles centered the table. The hostess was assisted by Miss Lila (Baby) Fergerson. JOHNSON ENDS LEAVE Marine Pvt. V. McKinley John son has returned to Parris Island Marine Base, S. C. after spending 10 days here woth his mother, Mrs. V. M. Johnson and other relatives. Pvt. Johnson has finished his bas ic training at Parris Island and will transfer to Camp Le Jeune for ad vanced training in the near future. RANGER ORANGE S. S. Williams, assistant vice president of the Citizens Bank and Trust Co. will speak at the meeting of the Ranger Grange Monday, Sept. 5 at 7 :30 p. m. at the Ranger School. The public is invited to at tend. Mr. Williams will discuss "Better Living and Community Development*. Murphy, N. C. Wed.-Thura., Aug 31-SrpL 1 Late Show, 8?t., Sept. 3 1 "Phantom Of The | l?gleM HENN THEATRE ANDREWS, N. C. Fri.-Sat., Sept. J-S Yvonne DeCarto-Rod Cameron "Saione, Where She Daifed" Technicolor Late Show, Sat., Sept. S "Yellewseek" Sun. -Moo., Sept. HIGH IN THE Tne?.-Wed.-Thorm-, Sept. H-8

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