ISDAY, OCT. J5, 1938 THE FRANKLIN PRESS AND THE HIGHLANDS MACONIAN PAGE THREE SOCIAL ACTIVITIES and :OMINGS AND GOINGS give for iE-ELECT . Joyce Cagle entertained at iome Monday .night with a llaneous shower, comphmen- to Miss Eddis Tallent, whose age" is to take place at the Methodist church Sunday Ing October 18. ^ . bride-to-be was the recipient lany lovely and appropriate ,eral friends called during the ng- HESTER SELLERS ORED ON 80th birthday , and Mrs. Wiley Sellers e,n- [ned with a dinner Sunday at home on Franklin Route 4, ring iUr. Sellers’ mother, Mrs. er Sellers, on her 80th birth- anniversary. e table was centered with a birthday cake, bearing 80 candles. number of the children, grand- ren, and several invited friends present. •. piljp. Killian, of Hayesville, here ‘Monday to visit his son, Frank Killian, at his home at Franklin Terrace, rs. Ella Peterson, of Asheville, spending this week with her ;r, Miss Mary Sanders, at her [6 on lotla street, ivvrence Plemmons, of Asheville, It the week-end with his son, man Plemmons, at his home on ite Oak street. !. S. 'Davis, of Highlands, has n spending several days in At- ;a and Commerce, Ga., with stives and friends, returning to j home Saturday. Ir. and Mrs. Henry T. Davis two daughters, of Belgrade, nt., arrived last week for a visit h his isister, Mrs.. C. D. Baird, her. home on Bonny Crest. liSs J^achel Slagle, who is at- ding^thens Business college ,at iens, ;^|Ga,, spent the week-end •e with lier parents, Mr. and •s. George Slagle, vlrs., ^oyd Sutton, of Decatur, ,, spent the week-end with her ither, [Mrs. A. W. Horne, and ter, Mrs. J. E. Perry, at their me on Harrison avenue. [ohn ^Arrendale, of Tiger, Ga., ,s among the business visitors re Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Perry Cunning- m and C. C. Currier, of Cornelia, I., were visiting relatives and ends here Friday. Mr. and Mrs. Lon Breedlove, of ipulpajtf;Okla., are spending several .ys with Mr. Breedlove’s parents, r. and Mrs. W. M. Breedlove, id other relatives at Oak Grove, Macon Theatre MON.-TUE., OCT. 19-20 . MARY OF ^SCOTLAND With KATHARINE HEPBURN, iFREDRIC MARCH, and a Cast of Thioiusands History’s mightiest drama of love and conflict in high places! The outstanding screen spectacle of the year! NEWSREEL ADDED ■wni>Wi». WED.-THUR., OCT. 21-22 rhythm on the RANGE With BING CROSBY, BOB BURNS, FRANCES FARMER Sing with Bing! Laugh at loot’s bazooka! Swing to ro- tnance! Enjoy the swellest piece of entertainment offered in many ^ moon! Everybody will like it! ALSO TRAVELTALK FRI.-SAT., OCT. 23-24 RED HOT TIRES With LYLE TALBOT AND MARY ASTOR A beautiful girl matches nerve skill -with the daredevil kings of the speedways! added—CARTOON AND chap. 5. "FLASH GORDON” Mrs. J. J, Moore and son, Bryce, are spending two weeks in Law- renceville, Ga., with Mrs. Moore’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Hood. John E. Rickman and daughter, Mrs. Roy Gibson, !Miss Verna Greene and T. M. Rickman went to Asheville Tuesday to see Roy Gibson, who underwent an opera tion for the removal of his appen dix at Oteen hospital Thursday. ^Ir. Gibson was reported to be improving. John O. Harrison, w'ho has been recuperating from pneumonia, was able to be out Tuesday for the first time i,n about two months. Mrs. F. S. Johnston left Friday for Tampa, Fla., where she w'ill spend the winter with her daughter, Mrs. W. C. Jones. Mrs. John B. Willis, who sus tained a fractured wrist and knee injuries in a fall on Monday of last week, has returned to her home on Harrison ave.nue from Angel hospital, w’here she under went treatment. Mrs. J. C. Barrington, teacher in the F'ranklin high school, has been confined to her bed for the past two weeks on account of iUness. Mrs. M. C. ilcCullough, of Mac on, Ga., is spending several days with her daughter, Mrs. George R. Patillo, and Mrs. Patillo at their home on Franklin Route 4. Mrs. O. K. Greenwood, of Travel ers Rest, S. C., is spending several days visiting her sister, Miss Lassie Kelly, at the Kelly Tea Room. L. R. Gaines returned to Athens, Ga., Friday after spending a couple of days at the Scott Griffin hotel with his son, Bob Gaines. Sam Jones, who has been visiting I his mother, Mrs. Callie Vanhook, at her home at Tesenta, will leave in a few days for his home in Washington. Mrs. C. C. Cunningham and Miss Pauline Hencey, of Franklin, Mr. and Mrs. J. Steve Porter and son, Charles, of Hendersonville, left Thursday morning for a two-weeks visit with Mrs. Cunningham’s daughter, Mrs. Don Yo.ung, at Crockett, Texas, and to attend the Centennial Exposition at Dallas. Miss Hencey will visit her brother, Sam Hencey, in San Antonio. C. M. Duvall, Ed Duvall and Kelse' Frady spent last week in Tennessee on business. Mrs. Sallie Clark, of Canton, is spending several days with her sisters, Mrs. H. T. Mozeley at her home on Bonny Crest, and Mrs. C. W. Teague at her home at Prentiss. Mrs. Mann Ray, who underwent an operation at Angel hospital Sat urday, is reported to be doing very ”'mk Charles E. Crawley return ed to her home in Macon, Ga., Friday after spending three weeks in Franklin. , Mrs Charles Gnndstaff an daughter, Dorothy, went to Red Springs Saturday to see their niec and cousin. Miss Lo^ West, who is attending the Darland ^*^F°oyd Weymann, who is attend ing the University of North Caro- linl at Chapel Hill, arrived Thurs day to attend the funer^ of his grandmother, Mrs. Ivalee Hurst, re turning to Chapel Hill Saturday. Mrs and Mrs. D. L. Spence an 1 two children and ^r. and ^ Davis Tippitt and daughter, all of ^^Mr.^an^'^'Mrt''Harry Holt arid several days m Atlanta, Ga„ ”|,:fw”w M£»n5l re.„n.d „ he, home on lo.l. ; ‘“frrS Sl3e and two Ja.gM- s le: v/ash., with Mrs. Slagles Ed Wallace returned to his home on Route 1 Friday after spending the summer Ln Lyman, Wash. He is the son of Mrs. and Mrs. George Wallace. Arthur A. Drake and family have moved from Hiawassee, Ga., to the Kiser house in the Cartoogechaye community. Clingman Hurst, who was called here last w'eek on account of the death of his mother, Mrs. Ivalee Hurst, returned to his home in Champaign, 111., Sunday. Miss Virginia Tilley, Miss Alice Rickman, !Miss Lois Henderson, ^[iss Evelyn Kinsland and Norman West, all students at Western Car olina Teachers college at Cullo- whee, spent the week-end here with their respective parents. ]Mrs. W. S. Davis and Miss Rachel Davis, of Highlands, were here Saturday shopping. ed to October 31, since many farm ers have been handicapped by the weather, he explained. He urged growers to take ad vantage of the time extension and SOW' enough conserving crops to qualify for the maximum payments possible for them to receive. A change in the regulations, he added, now permits growers to meet their minimum conserving crop acreage requirements by sow ing w'inter legtmies on fields where depleting crops were harvested ■earlier in the year. “HOSE” A SNAKE FREDERICK, MD.—Stooping to pick up a section of water hose near a flower bed, to the s,urj)rise of ^Irs. Lewis A. Moberly, tlve “hose” wriggled and writhed. A neighbor, hearing her screams, kill ed a six-foot blacksnake. “I enjoy that sensie of ease...” “CAMELS MAKE EATING a real pleasure,” says Hank Siemer {below}, deep-sea diver. Camels speed up the flow of digestive fluids — increase alkalinity. Births A son, ^Marshal Forest, w-as born to Mr. and Mrs. Forest Hallman on Friday, October 2. Extend Time to Plant Soil-Conserving Crops Winter legumes sown in October may be counted as soil-conserving crops under the 1936 soil-improve- ment program, according to J. F. Crisw'ell, of State college. The time allowed for seeding conserving crops has been extend- ' C4MCLS NOTED GLIDER CHAMPION {above}. Mrs. Russell Holder- man says: "Tired and tense as I may get, a few Camels at meal time and after seem to bring my digestion right back.” COSTLIER TOBACCOS Admission All Shows—10 A: returned to ner npil is spend- LTthe“"with^ daughter, Mrs. T, J. Johnston. Comxx\j^ /a "NO IWCHEV: )ke Can, Ccmvptetetij l|mr

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