THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER 'Second Section) ;CH 31. 949 tists To Hold Vacation School Clinic April Sixth Change Office bf Clyde yde town offi- rom t"r La' L a bill i'ltro- Houso o' '"'" night by Kcp Davis if Hay- , mavor. aldci' Tt judtfe would lee for officials inton arc two governing 01- lle and naici- trrms. Lvis explained his measure . flic ion neauiife t resiui'in.-i. icted. the terms fee officials will the first iues Monday. Clyde Better Homelife Is Stressed In Radio Talk By Miss Smith On her radio program last week, Miss Mary Margaret Smith, Hay wood County Home Demonstration Agent, read a paper written by Mrs. 6. J. Smyrl, of Camden, S. C, president of the South Carolina Council of Farm Women. The program over Station WHCC, created such favorable pub lic response that we are publish- citizens would vote then and every two years afterward on their town officials. The House Committee on Coun ties, Cities, and Towns was con sidering the bill early this week. Your Listening Pleasure At 140 )pois On Saturday gest Continuous Disc how In The Country. Four f Requests Featuring Don land Company. 1 To 5 P.M. ILLY ROUND-UP tson M. C's An Entirely Dif- L TX V T 1 tt:1I1:11.. 5 iow. ii iou liiKe mucin y lis Is a Must. 4:05 To 5 P.M. Thru Friday. ER BATTLE ghn Fights It Out Via The es For a Solid Hour Of Vari- rday Night From 8 to 9 P.M. U LIKE THE UNUSUAL WANT TO HEAR THEM ALL. mcc 00 ON YOUR DIAL I ing the paper on which it is based. In her opening remarks to her radio audience, Miss Smith said. "The people of Haywood County arc interested in community de velopment so I would like to share with you the following article on 'The Home and the Community' " The article: A good home is the sweetest place on earth. It is the foundation of all our national life, the hope of the future peace and brother hood of the world, and our eter nal anchor. The home is the first and best school tor training our future gen eration and leaders of tomorrow. Science would tell us there is no defen.se against the atomic bomb, but they are wrong. One million good homes can make it unneces sary for the world to fear atomic or any other kind of warfare. Jusl one generation of children brought up to love God, respect Hie righls of others and to express good will and friendliness toward others because they had learned it in the play pen of their own homes, would build a world in which the brotherhood of man was not just an intellectual abstraction, but a living, breathing reality, because (he children would be living it in all their relationships every day of their lives. If then the peace and brother hood of this world depends on mothers, on the kind of home they make and the kind of children they rear, how important and far reach ing are their duties and responsibil ities. United Homes To me it seems that our greatest concern for our future welfare as rural women should be for a great- ! er number of good, sound, united homes, where Christianity is taught, where love reigns. It is still true that "A nation is no greater than its homes." So if we are to have a great nation and :a 'fieacoftiU--world; we taUst strengthen our homelife, and the I task is ours as homemakers. The j challenge is so great that we must tremble when we think of it. We are horrified when we read of the increasing number of broken homes and realize what it does to the lives of the children of those homes.. We are inclined to blame the automobile, the picture show, cock tail, parties, and cards and liquor for breaking up an ideal institu tions; yet actually nothing disenteg rates except from its own inner emptiness. It takes a lot of living in a home to make a home. There is a great lacking somewhere in the meaning and purpose for establishing these homes. There are two essential things we must teach our children if we would have right world citizens for tomorrow. There must be a deep and abiding love between the members of a family. The trouble with too many people is that they were not lovingly enough raised themselves to know how to be good parents, or even good enough hus bands, wives, brothers, sisters, or friends, neighbors and citizens of the world. Most people will find it difficult to admit this even to themselves, yet our present day civilization hears testimony that many people have been brought up by parents who were inadequate for the job, State Leaders To Gather At Clyde Church For Meet The 1949 Haywood Baptist Va cation Bible School Clinic will be held April 6 at the Clyde Baptist church. The clinic will feature five simultaneous conferences, to start at 10:35 a. m.: ( 1 ) A genaral conference for pastors, general superintendents, and principals headed by State Sunday School secretary L. L. Morgan of Raleigh, and Mrs. Myra Motley, associate, also of Raleigh; (2) A beginner conference for all beginner superintendents and their assistants; (3) A primary conference for all primary superintendents and assis tants! conducted by Miss May Bomar of Spartanburg, S. C; (4) A junior conference for all superintendents of intermediate de partments, and assistants, headed by Mrs. Fred Fore of the Calvary Church of Canton; (5) An intermediate conference for all superintendents of inter mediate departments and assistants, headed by Mrs. D. D. Gross of Clyde Baptist Church. The program will open at 10 a.m. with song, Scripture and prayer. A message will follow,' and then the registration of delegates will be held. Following the conferences, Mrs. Motley and Miss Bomar will con duct a discussion of the daily joint service. , Miss Daphne Boone of Waynes- ville, the Associational missionary who made the announcement, said persons planning to attend the Clinic are asked to brinj a light lunch. The host church will provide the beverages, and members of the Clyde Church Women's Missionary Service will spread the lunch. Starting at 1:30 p.m., there will be a demonstration of the Joint Worship Service, which will take approximately 35 minutes. The re maining 40 minutes of this period will be devoted to a general confer ence for the entire audience. After this, the special conferenc es will be resumed with the same leaders in charge who conducted the morning sessions. For those planning to attend the Clinic, Miss Boone advised these preparations be made prior to the meeting: - Select your Vacation Bible School Faculty, principal; beginner, pri mary, junior, and intcrrhediate superintendents. She added, it would be wise also to select assist ants to these officers. Provide transportation to the meeting. Order Vacation Bible School supplies if you do not have them. She listed the following for 1949 supplies, wheh may be ordered through the Baptist Book Store, 304 North Tryon Street, Charlotte 2, N. C. Beginner Book B, Primary Book C, Junior Book D, Intermediate Book D, and a principal's Package. Each of these items are $2 each. Haywood Baptists Lead With dumber 01 Vacation Bible Schools For '48 THE OPENING Of The Skyland Cottages TEA ROOM SUNDAY, APRIL 3rd HOURS SUNDAY 12:30 -,2:30 and 6 - 8 WEEK DAYS 6-8 LUNCHEON BY RESERVATION Telephone 54-M-2 Last year, Haywood County's Baptists were more active with their Vacation Bible Schools than those in any other county associ ation in Region Nine. The County Association, furthermore, ranked fourth in the entire state in this activity, A report Monday from Miss Daphne Boone, Associational Mis sionary, showed that more than 82 per cent of the 46 Baptist churches in the County Association held such schools. The closest statistical rival was the French Broad Association, which had a record of 64 and four tenths per cent. The County Association's record Henry E. Wyatt Is Improving Henry E. Wyatt of Waynesville, a World War II veteran who suf fered a nervous breakdown last August, is reported improving at the Veterans Hospital in Fayette viHe. He entered the hospital approxi mately three weeks ago. The report on his current condi tion was made this week by his brother. Dewey, his brother-in-law, James E. Greene, and his wife, who visited him last weekend. Henry Wyatt, who spent part of his service as a Military Policeman at Camp McCain, Miss., during the war was employed as a weaver at the Royle and Pilkington Tapestry plant after his separation from the Army. unable to love their families enough or to teach them the fine art of living and loving. Home Teaching: Not only do the mothers of today need to foster love for one another in the home, but there is a real need for the teaching of devotion to God and all Christian virtues. The world will have no fear from war and all its evil when homes have family altars, when the Sabbath is observed and Christ and His word is taught. Then there is also the duty of teaching broth erly love for all men by precept and example in the home. Here the parents can lay a sure foundation for peace and under standing. If children are taught to (Continued on page six) SLEEP TONIGHT! Do miwthmf whra Affirm Biftit . . . troilres twistinn nd turnm . . . exhausted i" th raorainf. NORMALIN TABLETS can help bring calm, refrcshaic rent when nmni9 tension threaten normal tlexp. NORMALIN TABLETS are non-habit forming . . . aafe to uae. Tike directed. Medically approved ingredient. Guaranteed aatiefaetion or money refunded. NO PRE SCRIPTION NEEDED. Clip p th mnM ta insure gelling fenumt NORMALIN TABLETS on tal today it . . . SMITH'S DRUG STORE on the state-wide plane is even more impressive in light of the fact that there are 69 white asso ciations altogether, and twer In dian Associations. Region nine in cludes Buncombe, Carolyw, Mit chell, New Found, Transylvania, and Yancey, besides those named. In spite of last summer's polio epidemic, more than 124,000 per sons enrolled in the 1,453 Vacation Bible Schools that were actually held. The epidemic forced cancel lation of a number of other schools. These schools had an average daily attendance of more than 102,000 people. The cost of these schools totalled $48,549 which (Continued on page two St. John's Music Dept. To Give An Operetta 4th Gypsies in colorful costumes will dance and sing when "The Bohem ian Girl," an operetta by Arthur Johnson and May Van Dyke, is given by the music department of St. John's school, Monday evening, April 4, under the direction of Sisters Mary Anthony and Corine. The operetta is based upon the opera by Michael Williams Balfe. Arline, daughter of an Austrian count, is kidnapped by gypsies. Thaddeus, a Polish nobleman in hiding, wants to marry her. The Gypsy Queen, who wants Thaddeus for herself, places obstacles in the way. Through intrigue she has Arline jailed for theft. Arline's father finds her in jail and takes her home. Thinking Thaddeus is a gypsy, he opposes the marriage at first; but he consents when he learns Thaddeus is a nobleman. As a last resort, the Gypsy Queen orders Thaddeus to be shot, but Devilshoof, the kidnapper of Ar line, knocks the executioner's arm at just the right moment with the result that the Queen receives he bullet she had intended for Ar line. Operetta Characters Characters are: Gypsy Queen, Mozelle Liner; Thaddeus, Malcolm Williamson; Arline, Margaret Reese; Devilshoof, Dale Ratcliffe, Count Arnheim, Fred Calhoun: the Gypsy Singer, Zingara, Helen Howell; the Gypsy Dancer, Anitra, Nancy Furtado. Choruses of Gypsy singers: Low ery Ferguson, Carol Underwood, Bette Hannah, Mary Jean West, Jack Willis, Nancy Francis, Sara Jane Garrison, Mary Crouser, Ann Green, Mary Gunn, Sally Stovall, Marcia Lantz, Carolyn Bischoff, Alice Alexander, Nancy Bischoff, Joan Rowe, Margaret Noland, (Continued on page six) For Limited Time IdIJIU To Save You Money! To Bring You Comfort! 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