Newspapers / The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.) / Dec. 6, 1973, edition 1 / Page 2
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r Ttairsdaj The News -R ecord NON PARTISAN IN POLITICS BOX 367 MARSHALL; N. C. 28753 PUBLISHED WEEKLY BY COMMUNITY NEWSPAPERS, INC. "Second-class privileges authoring at Marshall. N. C. 2875? JAMES I. STORY, Editor Subscription Rates In Madison 15 Mos $4.50 12Mos 4.00 8Mos . 3.50 6Mos 3.00 4Mos.. 2.50 Subscription Rates Outside Madison 15 Mos $9.00 12Mos 8.00, 6 Mos 6.00 4 Mos . 4.00! ( Add 4 percent tax For All in No. Car. ) AIR MAIL 40c Per Week Frank Howeys Entertained With Party Mr. and Mrs. Frank W Howey entertained with a riinner party at their home in Monroe Saturday evening, Dec. 1st, in honor of Miss Joan Por. Vt and Tom Adams whose engagement was recently announced. Those present, in addition to the couple, were Mr. and Mrs. Warren Ponder of Weaverville and Mr. and Mrs. Luther Adams of Hickory; also, the Howey children Sarah, Sylvia and Frank, Jr. PERSONAL MENTION Mr. and 1 Mrs. Millard F. Tipton, of Marshall, returned last Thursday from Naples, Fla., where they visited their son, daughter-in-law and grandson, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Tipton and son, Raphael. They also visited the Florida Keys and other points of interest. On their return they visited Mrs. Tipton's aunts, Mrs. Corinne Reideman and Mrs. Irene Duncan, in Davenport, Fla SINGING There will be a gospel singing this Sunday night at the Alexander Baptist Church beginning at 7 o'clock Dennis Parris will be in charge The public is invited k EDITORIALS j Tuesday Deadline The public is again reminded that Tuesday morning is the deadline for news and advertising to be published that week. This newspaper often receives articles after 11 a.m. on Tuesdays, both personally delivered and through the mails, which are too late for printing. This early deadline is necessitated due to printing the News-Record on Tuesday nights, although the dateline on paper is Thursday. Articles received after the deadline are published the following week, where feasible. Another reminder is that the office of The News Record is open from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. on Mondays, Thursdays and Fridays. On Tuesday the office is open from 8 a.m. to 11 :30 a.m., with the same hours for Saturdays. Those wishing to leave "copy" when office is closed may do so by slipping "copy" through slit in door. Individuals who wish original glossy pictures which have been published (marriages, engagements, etc.) are urged to pick them up im mediately after publication. They may be misplaced if left in office too long. Heard And Seen By Pop One-Act Plays At MHC Friday-Saturday 8 Trinlnninnlrinririlnrin Pharmacy Comments The Patient's Do pjlicnls have 1 he right to lake their doctor's pre scriptions to any drug cen tcr ' Absolutely' This goes for prescription refills, also Tnat right holds true even if the phssician dispenses drugs from his own drug dis pensary In such a case it is natural for the doctor to want you to fill your pre scription in his office-pharmacy, but the fact remains ' Ydu slilChave ii perfect nght to have all your prescrip tions and "refills" filled al the pharmacy of your choice Right Wh not exercise vour freedom of choice by bring ing your next "'script" lo our prescription window'7 Thtnlt1 of us as your "personal" pharmacy and of mc aryour "persona!" pharmacist We're independentl owned and operated cm COMMUNITY MKDICAI CKINTEK PHARMACY Mors Hill Phon. 689 2591 Conveniently Locoted in the Medical Center HI POWELL The above comments appear eacti wee to air thoughts opinions and information we believe to be mportant to our tnends and customers your comments ae welcomed A correction is in order... in last week's issue, in the birth announcements, it read, born to Mr. and Mrs. Kermit Cody, of Marshall, a son, Kermit Bernard Cody III. ..of course this should have been born to Mr. and Mrs. Kermit Cody, JR . Edith and I laughed about it and I promised to make the correction... after all, Kermit and Edith are proud grandparents.. I'm glad that two of my close friends are able to be out again... Jeter P. Ramsey is recuperating at his home from leg injuries suffered several weeks ago. ..he's now able to drive again and says he'll soon be able to resume checker playing , and on Monday afternoon, my croquet pal, Andrew Bridges, came in the office to say "hello". ..he's been with his daughter, Sue, on Route 1, Swannanoa, after being a patient at the Or thopedic Hospital in . A$JbeyUk J ceaUy enjoyed, all,, threei basketball games at the gym f here ' last Friday night.. .the JV boy's game was close and exciting and I was thrilled at how well the girls played in defeating the girls of Owen High... and the night was complete when the Patriots defeated the Owen Warhor ses . it was also pleasing to see the fans from Mars Hill, Marshall, Spring Creek, Hot Springs and I-aurel all sitting on the same side of the gym yelling for the same teams the Patriots incidentally, I don't know the feminine of Patriots so I guess the girls will be called girl Patriot s don't think there's such a word as Patriotesses oh, well, just so they keep on winning I want to thank the Ralph Ramseys for bringing Bill and me those delicious oranges from 7g ( ) mtoimvm J'.' fMO. Wt mrt wmy to mm H mm wmt mmm year $iit CmHtkmm Hm.) Florida. . .mighty nice of them. ..the Christmas street lights look real nice, as usual, but due to the energy crisis, they're not turned on at night ...the gasoline shortage is really being felt around here. ..and thank goodness for these "warm nights" which don't require much heating fuel. ..can't last for long, though... Mars Hill College's Theatre Arts Department will present two one act plays in the recently renovated Owens Theatre, December 7 and 8. The plays, which will be totally directed and produced by students are Harold Pin ter's "The Collection" and Checkhov's "A Marriage Proposal". Bryan Rice, a senior Theatre Arts major from Asheville, will direct "The Collection", an absurd drama involving four characters. The cast is composed of Tracy Neese, a freshman from West Columbia, S. C. as Stella; Jim Rivers, a junior from Mars Hill as James; Arthur Brooks, a freshman from Bostic as Bill; and Jimmy Varnes, a freshman from Cayce, South Carolina, as Harry. "A Marriage Proposal" will be directed by Rick Croll, also a senior Theatre Arts major and a native of Marlton, New Jersey. The play consists of a father and his daughter, and a neighbor who keeps the comedy going by getting his proposals to the daughter mixed up in a never ending argument. The cast includes Pam Harris, a junior from Concord as Natalia Stepanovna; Chuck Mon tgomery, a junior from An nandale, Va., as Ivan Vassiliyitch Lomov; and Bill Gregg, a sophomore from Asheville as Stephan Stepanovitch. The sets are being built and designed under the directionof Jim Rivers, a junior from Mars Hill and the lighting will be handled by Jane Young, a junior from Mars Hill. Both are Theatre Arts majors. The curtain call is 8 p. m. on both nights. There is no ad mission charge for the productions and the public is encouraged to attend an en tertaining evening of one act plays. Servicemen 111 BRYAN, of married on honored by MR. AND' MRS. CRAWFORD Statesville, Route 4, who were November 6, 1913, at Marshall, were their children with open house on December 2, at the home of their daughter, Mrs. Henry Lewis. Ap proximately 100 relatives and friends attended. Out-of-town guests included Mr. and Mrs. Maco YVallin, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Ramsey, Mrs. Rose Ammons, all of Marshall; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bryan and daughters, of Raleigh; Mr. and Mrs. Billy Bryan, of Kaleigh; Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Bryan and son, of Raleigh: Mr. and Mrs. Lane Ramsey and daughter. Petersburg Va.; Mr. and Mrs. Lankford Storey and family, of Asheville; and Mr. and Mrs. Billy Payne and family, of Asheville. PVT. KEVIN SMITH Army Private Kevin E. Smith, 19, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Smith, route 1, Alexander, N. C, is assigned to the 84th Field Artillery in Neckarsulm, Germany. Pvt. Smith is a motor transport specialist in Battery D of the Artillery's 3rd Bat talion. SGT. LEE M. PARHAM Army Sergeant Lee M. Parham, son of Mr. and Mrs. Coy L. Parham, route 3, Ieicester, has returned to his home station in Karlsruhe, Germany, after lending support to the 7th engineer brigade's annual bridge training held on the Danube River near Grossemehring. His unit, the 565th Engineer Battalion, was selected to provide bridging materials and technical assistance as well as planning and super vising the training of three other engineer battalions of the brigade. In addition to this, the 565th helped with the training of several units from the 1st armored division, also stationed in Germany. Sgt. Parham is a repair and utilities noncommissioned officer in the battalion's headquarters detachment. His wife, Dorothy, is with him in Germany. jAMES JONES KARAMURSEL, Turkey -U. S. Air Force Staff Sergeant James Jones of Rt. 2, Mar shall has arrived for duty at Fennertepe, Turkey. Sergeant Jones, a radio relay equipment technician, is assigned an Air Force 'support Jinit. He " previously served at Shaw AFB, S. C. His wife, Virginia, is the daughter of Mrs. Lillie M. Tweed, Rt. 2, Marshall. He attended Clyde A. Erwin High School Asheville. Mr. and Mrs. Rankin Rice of Route 1, Marshall spent the Thanksgiving holidays in Florida. While there, they visited Cypress Gardens, Weeki Wachee Springs and Clearwater Beach. Hoyles Feted At New Home November 24 A surprise house-warming was given for Donald and Patsy Hoyle on Saturday night. November 24, at 7:30 p m at their new home on Morgan Branch Road Those present were Mr and Mrs Hoyle and son. Ricky ; Mr and Mrs Ron Kiser and daughter. Beth; Mr and Mrs Harry Ramsey and daughter. Melonie Barbara Bruce and daughter, Beverly; Jan Pressley, Jamie Briggs, lassie Buckner, Judy Wood, Jessie Boone, Bonnie Gosnell, Aretlua Norton, Annie Belle Silvers and daughter, Annie Lou; Jonsa Lee Hutchins, Gertrude Peek, Tommy Ann Blackwell and son, Bobby Scott, Loella Gosnell, Kathleen Coates and daughter. Sheila; Betty June Ballard, Lucille Sprinkle Wanda Edmonds. Mr. and Mrs. McClelland Rice, Shelly Ramsey, Yvonne Coates and Pauline Ramsey Many useful and beautiful gifts were received by the honorees. Hostesses for the ocassion were Mrs. Susan Kiser, Mrs. Tommy Ann Blackwell, Miss Yvonne Coates and Mrs. Bobby Jean Rice Get the job done, and done right. That's the North Carolina tradition. There are few places m America where people live so far apart and spread out for so many miles as m North Carolina It gives us a privacy and freedom unknown to most of the modern world To your telephone company that privacy and freedom means fewer telephones per mile than practically anywhere else Telephone wires must run great distances often for a single telephone And the distance our skilled repairmen must travel to repair a hne is longer This means that your telephone company s costs are much higher than most But it s a tradition in North Carolina that whatever the problem, somehow you get the Ob done, and done right And that s why we ve invested millions of dollars of new cable, switching equipment and telephones, to give you fewer party lines, faster calling, and service as modern as any in the nation There are still more improvements comirj, and much more to do. That means a great deal more money will have to be invested But if that s what it takes to give North Carolina the best service possible, it worth every penny! Westco Telephone Company Western Carolina Tclcphono Company WITH THE SICK Norman B. Roberta, of Route 1, Marshall, is a patient In Memorial Mission Hot.;-U where he is undergoing treatment. Walnut News Mrs. Pauline Chandler spent the week-end on Laurel with Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wade Gahagan and their daughter Gail. Mrs. Carrie Rector has returned to her home after spending a few weeks in Asheville with her son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Rome Rector. Mrs. Cecil McDevitt is a patient in Memorial Mission Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Guthrie of Asheville and their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Bob Halpin, of Nashville, Tenn., visited Miss Ruth Guthrie on Thanksgiving Day. The Rev. and Mrs. Robert Fuller of Asheville attended the morning worship service at the Presbyterian Church on Sunday. Woman Can't Open Mouth Carlton, England Roly poly housewife Shirley Turner, jealous of the wolf whistles her bikini-clad daughters attract on the beach, has got her teeth into a new slimming diet. She's had surgeons cement her jaws together to stop her eating. The 35-year-old housewife, a hefty 238 pounds, chuckled through clenched teeth and said: "I've lost 15 pounds in two weeks and my teeth will stay locked together until I'm down to 124 pounds." At this rate she won't be able to open her mouth until next June. Mrs. Turner's trouble is that she's a compulsive eater and nothing could make her stop. So doctors at nearby Not tingham General Hospital decided the only way to get her to kick the habit was a cement muzzle. They applied cement to her upper and lower teeth and screwed a silver splint in the cement on each side of her mouth. "It was painful at first, but not it feels better and gnawing hunger pangs have gone," she muttered. "What really made me decide to have this treatment was that I love fashionable clothes, but I just couldn't get any to fit me." The clincher came last summer when wolf-whistling beach boys giving her two teen-age daughters the eye made her feel embarrassed about her bulk "It was awful," Mrs Turner groaned "I just couldn' t put my bikini on and face it. "But if this treatment works, I'll be wearing a bikini and miniskirts next summer. Being fat is terrible " She can't open her mouth at all "I'm living entirely on tea, coffee and tomato soup spiced with plenty of salt, pepper and vinegar " Doctors keep a close check on Mrs Turner because mechanical lockjaw Isn't the easiest way to lose weight. "It could be done only under strict supervision," a medical ex pert said PERSONAL MENTION Mr and Mrs. Ralph Ramsey returned to their home in Marshall last week from Florida where they spent several days. In Leesburg they visited their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Al Dobbins and children. They also visited the Kennedy Space Center and Daytona Beach and visited Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Barnes at Ormood Beach. EDGEWOOD RESTAURANT MS MerrUu Ave. Aifcevfie , N.C Breakht Dkw REGULAR MEALS SHORT ORDERS SANDWICHES HOMEMADE PIES AIR-CONDITIONED Opeaaja.MMk IN MEMORY Of My Mother, MRS. MANDA CANTRELL Who Recently Passed Away "BLESSINGS THAT REMAIN" My dear loved Mother who, Is missing From the fireside and the feast Her face that has vanished Her voice that has ceased But I know she's passed forever From our mortal grief and pain And I thank thee, O our Jesus For the blessings that remain Thanksgiving, oh Thanksgiving That her love once blessed all of us here That she so long walked beside us Shareing every smile and tear For the joy the past she brought us No one can take away For the sweet and gracious memories Growing dearer every day For the faith that keeps us patient Looking at the things unseen Knowing spring shall follow winter And the earth again be green For the hope of that glad meeting Far from mortal grief and pain I thank thee, O our Jesus For the blessings that remain Sadly missed by her daughter, Marie Byars, of Rochelle, 111. orinnn ....mi nnnnnnnnnnn fire? ffif :r"W" i m-.mn i 1 i.m'B.rirTH ?ta wu HOLIDAY GREETINGS FROM YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD A.D. PHARMACY 3 2 O GILLETTE r I WILD CRICKET Z TABLE LIGHTER 5 Attractive Designs Mlg List $3 95 i7.89 SKINNY DIP 1 qddiv rrti nfthiP LmJ Assorted Fragrances D22 r 7T Mtg. L si $2 25 P ? V SKINNY DIP LJ tdiiit nin i rnvi i uir ' tl Sohri Crpam mmm voiognes Mtg List $2 50 Sa 7.36 AQUA VELVA D POKER CHIP Q BOTTLES mm 4 Different After Shave Lotions 2 Oz Each Mfg List $5 50 01 3. 2 5 AQUA VELVA I AFTER SHAVE COLLECTION 1 4 Different After Shave Lotions I 1 34 Oz Each Mfg List I $2.98 1.77 5 t"SL. I-1 Cl - .t-".un.-. AQUA VELVA OR I LECTRIC SHAVE RFFP STFIN I 6 Oz Mfg List $4 00 2.37t SCHICK HOT LATHER MACHINE Mfg List $19.95 7 7.25 a SCHICK HOT LATHER REFILLS Assorted Fragrances Mfg List $1 25 74 a fjln Ponds DREAMFLOWER U Dusting Powder a Mfg List E3 $i 25 ' .,ra 59c fflM!MM -- , ROMAN BRIO ilSPr A"e' Shave JUI. D DSKInJrACER WESTCLOX 5 I 1 AFTER SHAVE Ballmatic Alarm Clock llcBBF0D,SS sorted Q QT, Mennen'Clp C'0rS ( 1 Q D 1?Oz Bottles M,9 L,st $6 95 Vy Q 7.66"?,r 4.49 g "TROUBLE" SONAC DENTURE n AFTER SHAVE CLEANSING q mmm Mennen f SYSTEM - ZZ g1.41 11.99 c a Pi z CI i : t""i I 8 Howard's RX Store Main St. Mors HII, N.C n ri r i i ml m C nwl tiMnw ty Phone (I9.4S12 - - C,,viiMtiiwi Mla WovrvUf
The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.)
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Dec. 6, 1973, edition 1
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