- - 11 111 HlllHI.l , UZZZ ABOUT Schools (Continued Irom rage 1) Baldwin, James Carlton Brendle, Mary Elizabeth Brendle, Betty Ann Brown, Alice Marie Burgin, Fred Buff, William Edward Buch anan, Ken Jackson Caldwell, Kath leen ' Calhoun, Arthur Frederick Carswell, Edna Lee Callahan, Charles Cook, Lois Elizabeth Car ver, Donald Eugene Corwin, Har ry Earl Crocker, Esther Leila Da vis, Robert Francis Davis, Jack . Enloe, John D. Ezell, Jr., Nancy Lou Floyd, Beatrice Elaine Fran cis, Edith Eileen Fullbright, Jim mle Dale Galloway, Pearl Elizabeth Gaddy, Mary Jo Grasty; Betty Lee Gibson, George Rufus Garrett, Ralph Grasty, Patricia Ann Green, Clifford Green, Betty Joyce Hale, Anna Kay Head, Grady Ed ward Hannah; Jimmy Lawrence Hooper, Fran ces Flora Hendricks, Corctta, Alene Henson, Hazel. Catherine Hollings worth, Virginia Dare Hosaflook, Mary Dorcas Howell, Francis Irene Hoyle, June Wanda Hundley, Kath ryn Ann Hyatt, Frank B. James; Genevieve Jay nes, Sam Henry Jones, G. L. Kinsland, Donald Ray Leatherwood, Gene Liner, William Lawrence Lovedahl; James Russell McClure, James David Mcjunkin, John Hugh Med ford, Mildred Lavonia Medford, Nancy Jane Medford. Dixie Mae Mehaffey, James Howard Mehaffey, Howard Leonard Mehaffey, Troy Creed Messer, Harold Wayne Mills, William Louie Mills; Mary Helen Mills, Kathryn Clara Moody, Joan Morris, Phyllis Mayne Morrow, Phyllis Helen Noland, Mary Abel Osborne, George Rob ert Owen, William Edward Palm er, Richard Blaine Parham, Sam uel Fisher Patterson; Hazel Harris Palmer, Elizabeth Kathryn Patton, William Roy Phil lips, Guy Avrey Poteat, Carl James Pressneli, Homer Edwin Recce, Iva Joyce Rogers; Georgia Loyce Rogers, Garland Russell Saunders, Joe Keith Scates, Luther Wallace Shaw, Barbara Joe Anne Scates, Betty Sue Sheehan, Evelyn Phyllis Smathers, Julia Pauline Smith, Nancy Virginia Stamey, Susie Josephine Stamey; Velma Carra . Stamey, Richard Camden Smith, Homer Snyder, Jr. Betty Robinson Snyder, John Rob ert Terrell,. Vivian Scllars Watkins Donald R. Whisenhunt, James New ton Whitman, Charles Joseph Wo mack, Esther Marjoriq Woody, and Gene L. Yarborough. II. Hamby, pastor of Canton's High Street Baptist Church, giving the message to the 49 graduating seniors. Local ministers of all faiths in the Pigeon Valley communities will attend these services with their congregations. , , The music will be provided by the Bethel High School Glee Club, directed by Mrs. Delmar Phoenix. On Wednesday night, the seniors will receive their diplomas and the honor students will be presented their prizes during the annual graduation exercises. The program will open at eight o'clock in the high school auditori um. : In lieu of the traditional speeches by the valedictorian and salutatorian, the eight top-ranking seniors will deliver the prnlcipal addresses. E, J. Evans, the school principal, will present the diplomas. Forty-nine seniors, making the county's third largest graduating class, will receive their diplomas Wednesday night from Principal Evan J. Evans at the climax of the annual Commencement. This Sunday, the Rev. G. H. Hamby, pastor of the High Street Baptist Church of Canton, will preach the Baccalaureate Sermon at union services in the school auditorium at 11 a.m. Fines Creek High School's sen iors will hear Dean W. E. Bird of Western Carolina Teachers' College make the annual Commencement address during the traditional graduation exercises starting at 8 p.m. Wednesday. The school will present diplomas to nine seniors then. But one of them will have to be sent by mail Gus Ledford, one of the 1950 grad uates, is serving with the Army on occupation duty in Germany. Fines Creek's commencement week, however, will start tomorrow night with the commencement for the students who are ending their elementary school days. The awarding of diplomas to the eighth-grade pupils will highlight an evening program of dramatics and other entertainment for the primary and grammar school stu dents, On Sunday, the Rev. F. O. Dry. man will deliver the Baccalaureate address during services starting at the school at II a.m. . With Stato Office : -w v . - ( Canton High School The Rev. C. W. Klrby, pastor of the Central Methodist Church of Canton, will deliver the Bacca laureate Sermon the night of May 28; at the Canton High School auditorium before the school's 58 graduating seniors and their guests. t)ft the following Tuesday night, the graduating students will be honored at the annual Class ,;Night evfcnt. Featuring the program will bet th( presentation'; of a pageant, "Between The Book Ends", J 'he seniors will receive their lomas in the annual Conimence. ment Exercises in the high- sehbot auflitorium the night of M4y 3L. ', J 'he featured speakers latSthe rclses will be Francis Pless, Kenneth Sanford, Allcen Haynie, Barbara Medford, and Carolyn Mc Elrath all honor students and members of the Beta Club. Bethel High School The Baccalaureate Sermon will feature the union services at the .Bethel High School auditorium on Sunday morning, with the Rev, G. Clyde High School The Baccalaureate Program will open Commencement Week at Clyde High School at 8 p.m. Sun day In the school auditorium. Preaching the sermon will be the Rev. W. T. Medlin, pastor of the Clyde Methodist Church, and spe cial music will be presented by the Clyde High School Glee Club un der the direction of Mrs. Christine B. Shuler. Commencement Exercises will be held Wednesday starting at 8 p.m., wtih Geraldlne Fish to de liver the Valedictory address jjiid wanna jcnxins .Rogers, the.saluta tory;. o v 5 Also making featured addresses will . be Lucille Buchanan, Cleo Buchanan Spencer, and Mary Mor gan Pfiteate, who also are honoi students of the class. i Special prizes will be awarded to the winning students, and Coun ty Schools Superintendent Jacjk Messer will present the diploma to the 29 graduating seniors. . Selected to serve as marshals for the Commencement were these highest ranking students of the junior class: Janice Corzine, Bar bara Cockrell, Freda Grey Hipps, and Albert McCracken. The class mascots who will also have places- of honor In the pro gram are Timmie Leatherwood and C. B. (REX) HOSAFLOOK, JR. of Waynesville, joined the staff of the North Carolina Depart ment of Revenue as an auditor shortly after his graduation In March from the University of North Carolina. He is working at the Department's Asheville of fice, which covers western North Carolina. Student Speakers Chocon For Clyde Commencement Geraldlne Fish and Martha Jen kins Rogers will be the featured speakers at the annual Clyde High School commencement exercises Wednesday night. Miss Fish, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. G. R. Fish of Clyde, will make the valedictory address, whilo Mrs. Rogers will give the salutatory. Both girls are top students in the graduating class of 29 seniors. Miss Fish, a star In athletics and dramatics, was a high-scoring for ward in the high school's basket ball team last season, and served as an active member of the Future Homemakcrs of America chapter and the Beta Club at Clyde, Mrs. Rogers, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Jenkins, was prom inent also in both classe work and school student activities. Besides maintaining a high scholastic aver age all through her sebpol days, she was also an active member of the school's Beta Club. T h e Commencement program will open at 8 P. M. at the high school auditorium. Margaret Wilson. These are the seniors of 1950: Doris Caldwell Lindsay, Beulah Alline Medford, Clara Jo Ford, Sally Mae Buchanan, Geraldlne Fish, Lucille Elsie Buchanan, Cleo Buchanan Spencer, Mary Morgan Poleate, Dorothy Smith Ford, Shir ley Ann Welsh, Martha Jenkins Rogers, Donna Irene Seay. Joann Haynes, Helen Stamey Fore; Marie Jewell Evans, Charles Edward Ford, Carl Lee Mann, Eu gene Limbo, Carol Price,- Harold Rhodarmer, Richard Wayne Han nah, Richard Levi Morgan, Donald Carver; Ted Herbert McClure, Charles W. Morgan, Mark Haynes Brown, Richard Lenier Stanley, Martin Burdette 'McClure, and Joseph Howell Medford. On Monday night, the Clyde School's music students will pre sent a Music Festival in the audi torium, starting at 8 p.m. The Festival, under the direc tion of Mrs. Thomas M. Bonner, piano teacher, and Mrs. Christine Shuler, the school's music teacher, will feature the playing of the Rhythm Band of 60 students of the first, second, and third grades; the singing of the girls of the eighth grade under Mrs. Shuler's direc tion; and other numbers. The Rhythm Band will be led by Van Metcalfe and Mrs. Shuler Mrs. Bonner's piano students are Mary Jo Cole, Joyce Matthews, Gene Sizernore, Theresa Davis Kenneth Cole, Trena Rathbone, Judith Harris. . Elaine Sanford, Glenna Pressley, Anne Carter, Es sie Mae Harris, Mary Jane Greene, Larry Medford, Caroline Abbott, Mary Ann Moon, Sammy Haynes, and Nclda Cushion. MORE ABOUT Campbell (Continued from Page 1) were Milas Ferguson, the 1950 commander of the Wanyesvlllc Post; Roy Ruff, commander of the Hazelwood post; Lush Hall, newly- eiectea commander of the Canton post; George ' Hanger and Jeter Williams, both of the Canton Post; J. T. Russell, Waynesville post fi nance officer; Herman Francis of the Waynesville post; and Carroll Whilener, Thurman Smith, and Hoy Moody, all of the Hazelwood post.' . ', MORE ABOUT Gatlinburg (Continued from Paje 1) "Nope," answered one restaurant man, thats not competition, we feel that well need every one of them. "More and more people seem to be coming into the Park, every .summer. The Cherokee pageant is starting in July, and that will at tract a lot of others. "But I figure the- publicity we've been getting has helped us." The New York Times' 40-page vacation section of two weeks ago last Sunday showed the applica tion of the printer's Ink prescrip tion: on one page one ad of respect able proportions told the reader about the principal features of Gatlinburg. To place an ad two inches wide and two inches long In the New York Times' Sunday edition costs you $32. , The businessmen who make up the directors of the live-wire Tour ist Bureau supplement their extcn sive newspaper advertising with straight personal contacts. A few weeks ago, some 70 peo ple, including a party of 30 Cher okee Indians droye out of Gatlin burg in a motorcade and headed south. In towns and cities all the way to Florida, they stopped, showed pictures of Gatlinburg and the smokies, met Chamber of Com merce officials, exchanged travel literature with them. By the time they got back home, at least 20,000 more people knew about Gatlinburg, where it was, what it had. That was part of the returns on an investment of $50 expenses for each of the 30 cars in the Gatlin burg caravan. Backing up this alert advertising Dronram is the peoples' willingness and ability to make the most of what they got. v . This town of 2,200 men, women. and children, is hemmed in pretty closely by the mountains in a val ley just 1,333 feet above sea level. They can't expand outward very far. So they utilize every available square foot of land within their limits. Beautifully designed, well-built tourist courts and hotels fronted by rich, green lawns greet the "visitor as he drives Into town from the Park. t '' , - There's variety in the design Of the gift shops, restaurants, and tourist places. But generally all of them seem to have been built in compliance with a strict mini mum high standard. . Both sides of the main street arc flanked by these places, but the building continues on the hills right above the street. Everywhere you look there is a beautiful struc ture of some sort, or one in the process of being built. Even the buildings with the most prosaic functions are pretty. If you don't see the sign, you're liable to mistake the town's new $1,500,000 water works plant for a modern hotel fronted by, a lawn as care fully kept as a national tournament golf course. If, it weren't for the necessary gasoline pumps in front of it, one of the new filling stations could pass for one of the new motor courts. The motorist comes Into Gatlin burg from the Park, and leaves Gatlinburg to visit the Park. In either sense it's his temporary base of operations while he is near the Park. ;. - Tourist court owners in Waynes ville, 70 miles north east and 1,- 700 feet higher, report many tour ists from outside the state stop in Waynesville for the night on then trips west. But many others keep right on going. "They say they want to get to Gatlinburg before dark," said one veteran of the tourist business. "They've never been there be fore, but they want to get there, and they're in a big hurry to get there." That's the Gatlinburg printer's ink showing. The tuberculosis death rate in Japan has been among the highest in the world for the past 30 years but health programs inaugurated by the Supreme Command of the Allied Powers are reducing the ex cessive death rate. MORE AEOl'T Motorcade i Continue hm Pj Spartanburg, anrt ,.: the motorcade from hl be accompanied tlim' Each carentcrinBti,.. ! carrv a iarti u. c k f - Udnn on , The Merchants i Tourist Association of Comment HiJ " m r'"w"6 1,1 me pruiwt InS thf IHnlnr..l nprsnne m-jti-.. "I . "-".us me ui , their own expenses Those planning tofoake! should attend th. sw' at the court house herJ night at eight o'clock in 1 icvcive laswmnute full particulars. ERROR Correct? LANCASTER, O. tup, J came close to convicting charged with a traffic voting to find him innocwf C11,u f'Knea a printed "verdict guilty" instead other form and th in,,- read it in court. When th! inierrupiea to protest, the was correciea. from I Clark, 08. del; STILL AT IT CHATHAM. Mass. (UP) Willard A. Swan, who killed his first fox about the time the Civil War broke put, spent his 101st birthday gun ning tor his 200th. X Fines Creek High School Fines Creek School's Commence ment Week exercises will open to morrow night with a program hon oring the students ending their elementary school days. The awarding of the diplomas to the eighth grade pupils will feature the event, opening at 8 p,m. The students of the primary grades will give a program with a toy orchestra, with the grammar grade pupils to present "Life Of The Party," a one-act play. The entertainment and the presentation of diplomas to the graduates will close the program. On Sunday morning, the Rev. F. O. Dry man will preach the Bac calaureate Sermon to the graduat ing seniors of the high school, the services scheduled to start at 11 o'clock. The Commencement Week will come to a climax Wednesday night when the nine graduating seniors will receive their diplomas and special awards. Only eight will be present, how ever, for Gus Ledford is in Ger many serving with the Army Dean W. E. Bird of Western Carolina Teachers' College will deliver the annual commencement address, and the other featured speeches will be made by the school's honor students. Making the valedictory will be Thomas McCracken. The salutatory addresses will be given by Cenie Ferguson and Bet ty Jo Russell. The graduating seniors, itirlurf. ing the student speakers are Mur rel Ferguson. Frona Ledford D. B. Arnngton, Frank Davis,' Ray No land, and Gus Ledford. Crabtree-Iron Duff The 19 graduating seniors nf Crabtree-Iron Duff High School will start their final week as stu dents at 2:30 p. m. Sundav whpn they gather in the auditorium for the Baccalaureate program. lhe Hev. Horace L. Smith, castor of Canton's First Baptist church, will deliver the annual sermon. The program will open with the procesisonai, "Crown Him With Many Crowns." followed by the invocation given by the Rev. Mrs. C. O. Newell, co-pastor of the Crabtree Methodist Charge. ' Principal Fred L, Safford will make the nnnquncements, then the school's Glee Club will sing an offering just before and Imme diately after the sermon. The Rev. Paul Thrower, pastor of the Bethel and Hazelwood Pres byterian churches, v.'ill give the benediction, and the program will close with the recessional. "Th Sentry." Following the graduation exer cises for the students of the eichth graao Monday night, the seniors win close tilclr high school davs on Tuesday in the traditional com mencement opening at 8 p. m. at the school auditorium. our honor students of the graduating class will deliver the principal address for the program, and the two highest ranking stu dents trom each of the under graduate classes will serve as mar shals. ine featured speakers will he Joan Medfprd, Eleanor Kinsland, Dorotha Lee Noland and Bob Leming. The Rev, Frank Leatherwood will give the Invocation following the processional, "Guard of Honor" which will open the program. The Glee Club will sing, "Sun down," and Miss Medford will make the address of welcome. Miss Kinsland and Miss Noland will follow her on the rostrum, and the Glee Club will sing "When Lights Are Low." , The presentation of the diplomas by Jack Messer, county schools superintendent, and the special awards by Mrs. Fred L. Safford will bring the program to a climax. Mr. .Leming will deliver the fare well address, with the recessional, "Semper Fidelis," following. The Rev. C. O. Newell, co-pastor of the Crabtree Methodist Charce. will close the exercises with his benediction. -- - The honor students who will serve as marshals are Bobbie Smith, chief marshal; Lois McCracken. Doris Sue Parks, Doris James, Mattie Sue Medford and Maxine, Medford. Patsy Crawford and Roger Fer guson will be the mascots. ' The graduating students Include: Hilda Best, Don Crawford, Jim Davis, Ralph Elkins, Andrew Haney, J. C. Haney, Eleanor Kins land, Bob Leming, Edgar McElroy. Joan Medford, Dorotha Lee No land, Farrell Sanford, Carroll Smith, Bobby Stevenson, Billy Welch, Keller Wells, Charles "West, Novella Wood and Betty Jo Fer guson. The eighth grade class's com mencement exercises will open at 7:30 p. m. Monday, offering a well- balanced musical program coming to a climax with the presentation of the diplomas by Glenn Noland, the teacher of the class. ""Honor students will deliver the featured addresses, with Sybil Bradshaw giving the , valedictory, and Jewell Dee Ferguson deliver ing the salutatoiy. Taking leading parts in the pro gram will be the pupils of the fifth, sixth and seventh grades, as well as the graduating class. The fifth grade is to give the welcome song and another choral offering, while the seventh grade will give a play. The sixth grade's flute ensemble will play several offerings, and a trio from the class Louise Best, Doris Messer and Barbara Smith also will sing a special number. The t program also Will feature the playing of flute quartets of George Kirkpatrick, Tommy Kirk patrick, Martha tell Chambers and Jean Crawford in one; and Bar bara Crawford, Carolyn Bryson, Boyd Fisher, and Roger McElroy in another. The awarding of the diplomas will follow the musical ' program and clo the exercise, wm rmBS hMISaitxi m nU'ClPCT? pkg. Kraft OniiDi . sliced COKES ... 6cBr 23c PICKLES . . . 2Lr 25c CATSUP . . . "sST 19c HOT DOGS . S 39c BUNS HlPl - Itchin' to get out of the kitchen? Then pack up and picnic this weekend. Fill the lunch basket with all the favorite treats gloriously good foods selected from our ' vast variety of picnic-snacks all low-priced to save you money ... con veniently displayed to save you shop ping time. Look 'em over. Make your list. For it's picnic time again. KRAFT MAYONNAISE .... pt. 35c FRENCH'S MUSTARD 6-oz.lOc STUFFED OLIVES ... .. ...... . 2-oz. 20c VAN CAMP Pork & Beans .... Mb.225c STAR - KIST ' "1 Tuna Chunks ...... can 35c . 1 KRAFT QUART JAR PEAR HALVES' PINEAPPLE Fruit Cocktail ..... PINK SALMON WHEATIES Orange Ade;-.:..: CREAM CORN . No. 2tt Rosedale No. 2 Dole Crushed Libby's Buffet Peter Pan 8-oz. Pkg. 46-oz. Orangcx If LETTUCE . 2251 I onions' Isa w II BANANAS SE, Ib. 22Tcf ft BEANS 2j No. 303 A DelMalzelC RED MSttdedl 011X711117 DTIIMC! No. 2 GREEN PEAS .. SWIFT'S PREM Stokely No. 303 Trellis 12-oz. Can VALUABLE COUPON, GIFT CATALOG, RECIPES IN EVERY SACK mmu 23 Ik. b2 $2.2 ' SHOP SAVE ill riiii fSUPERMARMD