Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / Feb. 4, 1943, edition 1 / Page 4
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I :) i (One Day Nearer Victory) THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 4, Page 4 THE WAYNES VILLE MOUNTAINEER lit ft ."J !':! Miss Ethel Craig Is Married To Hugh J. Sloan Saturday Evening Announcement has been made of the marriage of Miss Ethel Ran kin Craig to Hugh J. Sloan. The vows were solemnized at 8 o'clock Saturday evening in the living room of the parsonage of the First Methodist church. The Rev. J. Clay Madison, pastor, performed the ceremony. Only members of the immediate family and a small group of inti mate friends were present. There were no attendants and the couple entered the room together. The bride wore a black after noon gown trimmed with a yoke of turquoise blue embroidered in pearls. Her accessories were in black and her flowers were a cor sage of pink roses. Mrs. Sloan is the daughter of the late Clyde C. and Mrs. Mary Rankin Craig, of Gastonia. She has been head of the commercial department of the Waynesville township high school for the past several years. She is a graduate of the Woman's College of the University of North Carolina, and of the Smithfield Business College, of Richmond, Va. She has also at tended several summer sessions of the Bowling Green Business Uni versity of Bowling Green, Ky. Mr. Sloan, a native of Georgia, is the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Sloan, of Waynesville. He has resided here since his gradu ation from Emory College. He was manager of the Haywood Electric Power Company, which was later sold to the Carolina Power and Light Company. Mr. Sloan was also active in the management of the Southern Meth odist Assembly until it was for mally taken over by the Methodist church. Though not a member at present, he was a charter member of the Waynesville Rotary Club. He has served as superintendent of the Sunday school of the First Methodist church for Beveral years. He is now manager of "Blink Bon nie," popular summer guest house IF YOUR HOSE CLOSES UP TONIGHT Here's mighty good news . . . It your nose "closes nn" tonleht and PURPOSE I MEDICINE makes breathing difficult, put 3-pur- pose VICKS va-tro-noi up eacu muu. Va-tro-nol does 3 Important things. It (1) shrinks swollen membranes. (2) soothes Irritation, 3) relieves tran sient nasal congestion. It brings more comfort, makes breathing easier, thus invites sleep ...And remember, it helps prevent many v?v'"ii colds developing if ...mtrm C.iS used in time. Fol- VICKS directions in VA.TR0.MOl New Spring Fabrics Yes lovely new spring fabrics. Not just a few, but lots of them. New prints coming in every day. All kinds of materials. Fast Color Prints 15t up Jrk -Special- 25c Value Prints Slightly Mis-printed 230 yd. 80 Square Prints 290 yd. Showing this spring lovely ray ons as well as smart cottons. -And For PC 1 C. E. RAY'S SONS Haywood County Nurses Association Hold Meeting The Haywood County Nurses Association held the January meet ing on Monday night at the nurses home of the county hospital, with Mrs. Lemuel Leopard, president, presiding. ' Following the business session, a round table discussion was held on the local nursing problems. Plans were formulated to ask co cooperation of the women of the county. Three new members as follows were taken in as members of the association: Mrs. J. Clay Madison, Miss Pauline Messer, and Miss Mary Ethel Williams. Mrs. Howard Bryson, Haywood county public health nurse, gave an account of the recent district meet ing of nurses held in Asheville. A social hour was enjoyed with Mrs. Leopard and Mrs. Francis Garren as hostesses. Haywood Chapter UDC Meets Tomorrow With Mrs. Grover C. Davis The Haywood chapter of the United Daughters of the Confed eracy will meet tomorrow after noon at 3:30 o'clock with the pres ident, Mrs. Grover C. Davis. Mrs. Sam Queen will have the paper of the afternoon, the sub ject being "George Washington's and Thomas Jefferson's Part in the Creation of Democratic Policies for the New Nation." All the members are asked to bring a book to donate to the Vic tory drive for books for the boys in service. Only books of special interest are asked in the cam paign. located on the grounds of the nron. erty of the old Haywood White Sul phur Springs Hotel. Following the ceremony, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Sloan, the son and daughter-in-law of Mr. Sloan, entertain ed with a cake cutting at their home. Guests included those who attended the marriage ceremony. The hosts were assisted by Mrs. S. H. Bushncll and Mrs. J. H. Way, Jr., in serving. Time to Cook with Gas the Perfect Fuel Economical Clean Quick Essotane Metered Service City gai convenience imtalled anywhsrt Brading Gas Service p The Home We are expecting this week and many more later curtain materials cretonnes and lovely finished cur tains. Many other new things for your home. Drop by and let us show you. PARK SHOP AND SAVE AT The Gordons Given Dinner Party By Mrs. R. L. Allen Mrs. Rufus L. Allen was hostess on Tuesday evening of a dinner part as a courtesy to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Gordon, of St. Petersburg, Fla., and Waynesville. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon did not go to Florida as their usual custom this year, but closed their home on the Balsam Road for several months and have been guests of Mrs. Allen for the greater part of the winter. They plan to reopen their home at Balsam this month. In addition to Mr. and Mrs. Gor don, Mrs. Allen had as her guests on Tuesday evening, Mr. and Mrs. Rudolph Hollaus, Rev. and Mrs. J. Clay Madison, and Mrs. R. R. Campbell. ... Young Hostess Gives Party On Her Eighth Birthday Anniversary Barbara Ann Teague, young daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. T. Teague, was hostess on Wednes day afternoon at the home of her parents on Boyd avenue with a party in observance of her 8th birthday anniversary. She was assisted in entertaining her guests by Miss Gladys Ezell and Miss Frieda Mae-Teague. The guest list included the fol lowing: Dorothy and Louise Mc Bride, Betty Sutton, Patsy Ezelle, Julia Ann Stovall, Linda Sloan, Ann Coman Crawford, Marguerite Leatherwood, Joan Davis, Dora and Violet Jane Matney, Mary Ann and Dorothy Liner, Betty Ann and Teddy Purcell, Sonny Miller, Hugh Frazier, Jr., Gerald Mehaffey, Charles Messer, Dicky Helmick and Lucius Jones. . Mrs. H. H. Holt Elected President Of The Hyder Mountain Home Club Mrs. H. H. Holt was elected pres ident of the Hyder Mountain Home Demonstration Club at the meet ing held on Thursday afternoon with Mrs. K. R. Dotson. Ten mem bers were present for the meeting. Others who will serve with Mrs. Holt include: vice president, Mrs. E. K. Dotson; secretary and treas urer, Mrs. Matt Caldwell; song leader, Mrs. Teeny Jones. Miss Mary Margaret Smith, county home agent, discussed the year book and plans for the club members. The demonstration of the afternoon was on "The Home Front Plans For Action." Refreshments were served dur ing the social hour fololwing the business and program. Waynesville Civic League To Hold Meeting With Mrs. Pv. L. Allen The Waynesville Civic League will meet at the home of Mrs. Rufus L. Allen on Church street on Wednesday evening, February 10th, at 7:.'S0 o'clock. Due to the rationing of gasoline all meetings for the remainder of the winter will be held at the home of Mrs. Allen, president of the organiza tion. The hostesses of each meet ing will entertain in their turn. Lake Junaluska Surgical Dressings Group Meets Four Days The surgical dressings rooms at Lake Junaluska are now open four days a week, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. The women of the community are urged to attend as often as possible and aid in rolling the bandages for the Red Cross. Central Elementarv PTA To Observe Founder's Day Monday Afternoon The Central Elementary Parent Teacher Association will meet on Monday afternoon at 3:15. A Founder's Day program will be given by Mrs. Guv Massip in charge. Mrs. Linwood Grahl, president, will preside. All members of the association are urged to attend the meeting. Woman's Society Of First Method st Will Meet On Tuesday, 9th The Woman's Society of Chris tian Service of the First Metho dist church will meet in the church dining room on Tuesday afternoon at 3:30 o'clock. Mrs. Noble Garrett, president, will preside. All the members are urged to be present. Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Hogan have returned from a visit to Green ville, S. C, where they were with their son, Jack Hogan, of the U. S. Army Air Forces. They were accompanied by their daughter, Mrs. Clifford Harrell, of Asheville, and their son, Harry Hogan, of Canton. They also visited Flight Officers Harvey Harmon and Earl Hart, who have been guests here. Until the advent of motorcars, gasoline was considered a waste product of kerosene; it was poured into rivers or bunved. Harriet Cutler Coburn Wedded To Dr. Thomas Stringfield, II Methodist Group Of Hazelwood To Hold Meeting Thursday, 11th The Woman's Society of Chris tian Service of the Hazelwood church will meet at the church at 2:30 o'clock on next Thursday afternoon. Haywood Girl Placed In War Industry After Course In War Training Miss Lillian Ethel Blaylock, of Canton, route 2, who has been trained at the Asheville War Pro duction Training Project, has re cently been placed in war indus try. She received training in sheet metal work and has been placed in the Champion Fibre and Paper Company in Canton. Hazelwood Folks Are Back From Washington Mrs. Ella Massey and two chil dren, Blanche and Ned, have re turned home after spending sev eral days in Washington, D. C, with Mrs. Massey's oldest son, Pri vate William Massey, who is in the U. S. Army and stationed at Balti more, Md., with the Glenn L. Mar tin Airplane Corp. Young Massey is a graduate of the Waynesville township high school and attended Brevard Col lege and Western Carolina Teach ers College, Cullowhee, before go ing into service. County Baptist YWA Met In Hazelwood The meeting of the Baptist Hay wood County Council of the Y. W. A. was held Tuesday evening at the Hazelwood Baptist church. The Rev. J. A. Herring, pastor of the Cullowhee Baptist church, was the principal speaker. Rev. Herring and Mrs. Herring who are now residing in Cullowhee, were before the war missionaries in South China. A solo was rendered by Miss Wilma Hoyle, accompanied at the piano by Miss Ruth Summerrow. The following officers were elect ed for the coming year: President, Miss Wilma Hoyle, of Hazelwood; vice president, Miss Lenora Mae Walker, of Waynesville; secretary and treasures, Miss Dorothy Saun- ers, ot West Canton. Mrs. W. G. Francis and her (laughter. Miss Betty Francis, re turned last week from a three months' visit in Gulfnort, Miss., and New Orleans. Mr. and. Mrs. Charles Balentine and young sons have returned to Waynesville after having been liv ing in I'ineville for the past few months. Mrs. Rul'us L. Allen had as her guest (luring the past week her nephew, William Day, of New York City. Young Day, who has been educated in Europe, has recently volunteered in the U. S. Navy. Mrs. Tela Peebles, of Camp Blanding, Fla., has been visiting her sister, Mrs. Franklin, who has been ill at her home in the Maggie section. Mrs. Ruth William Rotha and young daughter, Jean Rotha, of Hendersonville, spent the week-end in town with the former's mother and sister, Mrs. J. L. Williams and Miss Dorothy Williams. Charles Leatherwood, son of the Rev. and Mrs. Frank Leatherwood, who has been attending Furman University, is now at the home of his parents and expects to be call ed for service with the armed forces soon. Saunook News Carl McCracken, Jr., who is now located in Norfolk, Va., visited his parents during the past week. Bob Hooper, who has been em ployed in Newport News, Va., is now home. John R. Singleton, of the U. S. Navy, spent the last week with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Singleton. Rev. Ben Cook preached at the Pleasant Balsam Baptist church last Sunday. Carl McCracken, who has been employed at Wilmington, has re turned home. Mr. and Mrs. Tommie Cooper, of Balsam, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Hooper. Miss Gladys Arrington and Miss Louise McClure gave a marshmal low toast on Friday night. Those attending were: Miss Juanita Ar rington, Miss Mary Edith Dillard, Miss Annie Derrick, Miss Christy Bryson, Arthur Corbin, Herman Downs, William McMahan, Billy McClure, Toiri Dillar, Charles Der rick, Kenneth Smathers, and Walt Derrick. Miss Harriet Cutler Coburn, of Asheville, became the bride of Dr. Thomas Stringfield, II, at high noon yesterdav at AH Souls Church in Biltmore. with the rector, the Re. il. N. Northup, pronouncing the vows. The altar was arranged in tail vases of white gladioli against a background of palms and fernt. Cathedral candles were advantagt ously placed among the flowers and greenery. Prior to the marriage Dr. Arnold Dann. organist, rendered a program of wedding music. The numbers in cluded, "The Third Act of Lohen grin," by Wagner, with the entrance of the wedding party he played "Reverie," by Bonnett, and during the ceremony, "The Legend of the Mountain." Mendelssohn't wedding march was used as the recessional. The bride was given in marriage by her father, Commander Hanie Cutler Coburn, of Asheville, and was met at the altar by the bride groom, who entered alone. She was attired in a wool dress of olive green, with a coat of golden rod yellow, and her hat was of a rose shade trimmed with veiling. Her accessories were in brown and sne carried an old fashioned nosegay. Ben Sloan, of Waynesville and Pfc. Frederick Love, of the Green ville Air Base, cousins of the bride groom, served as ushers. Following the wedding a lunch eon was given at Sunnyside Inn on Macon Ave., for the bridal party, members of the two families and the out of town guests. The bridal table was centered with a tiered wedding cake topped with a minia ture bridal couple. White flowers in crystal bowls and white taptrs completed the arrangement. The couple leit by train ior a wedding trip to New York af;er which they will be at home in Wsy nesv ille until Dr. Stringfield, who has volunteered, is called for ac tive duty. The bride attended St. Genevive- of-the-Pines, Asheville, Fassifern School, Hendersonville, and the Rutherford Nursing School, of Ru therfordton. At the time of her marriage she was an instructor of student nurses at the Rutherford Hospital, of Rutherfordton. She is descended from Edward Cobbourne, an original settler, of Dracutt, Mass. Her parental grandfather, Dr. J. Milton Coburn, was a former mayor of Norwalk, Conn. The bridegroom is the son of Dr. and Mrs. Samuel Lanier String field, of Waynesville. He was grad uated from Wofford College, Spar tanburg, S. C, and later studied medicine at the University of North Carolina. He received his M. D. degree at the medical college of South Carolina at Charleston, and served his interneship at Watts Hospital, Durham. Dr. Stringfield returned a few months ago from England, where he served under the American Red Cross with the Emergency Medical Service of the British Ministry of Health at Botley's Park Hospital near London. Since his return he has resumed his practice here with his father and his uncle, Dr. Tom Stringfield. Dr. Stringfield is a member of the Haywood County Medical so ciety, and the North Carolina State I Medical society and the Waynes- j ville Rotary Club. Among those from Waynesville attending the marriage were: Dr. and Mrs. S. L. Stringfield, James King Stringfield, student at Chapel Hill, Dr. and Mrs. Tom Stringfield, Mrs. Carl Hill, Miss Margaret Stringfield, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh J. Sloan, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Sloan, Mrs. J. H. Way, Jr., Mrs. W. T. Crawford, Mr. and Mrs. H. B. At kins, Mrs. Janie Love Taliaferro and Mrs. Hugh A. Love. Miss Dorothy Richeson, student at Peace College, spent the week end here with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Richeson. Barren Clark, son of Mr. and Mrs. Seymore Clark, of Hazelwood, who recently enlisted in the U. S. Navy, is now spending several days here with his parents. Mrs. W. A. Hyatt and daughter, Nancy, spent the first of this week in Brevard where they were called due to the illness of a niece of Mrs. Hyatt's. Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Woody an nounce the marriage of their dau ghter. Evelyn, of Canton, to Sam mie Sherrill of Waynesville. They are making their home with the bridegroom's parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Sherrill of Waynesville route one. AIR CORPS KATE! Crporal Lane makes a provisional three-point in the ruah for Kate's Romford cake . . . Send your man-is-training home-bakel delights. Assure success with Romford Baking Powder. All-phosphate and rich in calcium. FUli Va kmhri'l Tlnly Kap Material. Writ today Romford Baking Powder, Bos E, Romford, Rhode Island. Wmo-'-am'tesrt, -! .Mm f ... IK (tMQWW 0 f I V1 it! ifirrti www Massie's Dept. Store C. J. REECE, Owner "A aO (mj:u.uiu ' L
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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Feb. 4, 1943, edition 1
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