Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / June 22, 1950, edition 1 / Page 8
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i: jJgws items From Cecil Community A- Sirs. J. Edgar Burnette, Reporter A two week revival was held at the Laural Grove Baptist Church, dti Little East Fork, with Rev. Ingle and Rev. O. L. Ledford conductine the services. The services were con cluded on Friday night. '. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Medford and family have moved into the Howard Meatord house. 'The first coat of oil and tar was spread on the Lake Logan road last week to help keep down dust in dry weather. 1 1 Mr. and Mrs. Herbert S, Francis and family have moved to Eugene, Oregon, where Mr. Francis is now employed, instead of Washington as previously reported. Rev. B. N. Rogers and Mrs. George Allen were dinner guests on Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Coy Pressley and family. ' A picnic supper was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ted Inman on Sunday. The guests included: Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Warren, Sr. and family; Claude Warren and family; Mrs. David Vance and family, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lee Vance; Mrs. Harmon Rogers and family o f Enka; and Mr. and Mrs. G. L. War ten, Jr. of Asheville. . Mr. and Mrs. Will Pharr were visitors at the Riverside Baptist Church at the Sunday evening ser vices. Mr. Pharr made a very in teresting talk during the General Assembly program using as his subject "Go Out". Mrs. Evie Knight Woody and Marion "Cap" Queen were married on Saturday afternoon at the home of Rev. T. E. Erwin. They are now residing In the Dix Creek community. Mrs. B. N. Rogers who has been seriously ill for the past six weeks was taken to the home t)f her daughter, Mrs. R. J. Lawrence of Canton. Mr. and Mrs Paul Erwin, Mr. and Mrs. Hermon Erwin, Mr. and Mrs. Troy Erwin and son, and Rev. and Mrs. T. E. Erwin, and daughter had a picnic birthday dinner on Sunday at Black Camp Gap. Mrs. Lawson Reece is much im proved after a long illness. cAHTiiun's so; j takes to ::a r i .A t i I P. v 1111111111! va,iMfNS'.."" ) iiiii.,v.iw-,vjv!iy?'i.,.t BEFORE MAKING his first trip on a U. S. destroyer, Arthur MacArthur, son of Gea Douglas MacArthur, inspects the yacht Golden Bird with Rear Admiral Benton W. Decker (right) at Yokosuka Naval Base, Japan, He made the trip back to Tokyo on the VSS Slkkwell (International) Livestock Meet Set For July 1 State Agriculture Commissioner L. Y. Balientine and other agri cultural leaders will appear here July. 1' at a western district live. stock meeting sponsored by the jn. c. rarm Bureau. . This was announced tnrtav h Oral L. Yates of Iron Duff, presi dent of the Haywood Cnutifv Firm Ill Bureau. The mcetino will oopn at Hum at the Court House In WflvnuB. ville. . This wlil be. one of a snriec tho state farm organization Is sponsor ing mr the promotion of the de velopment of the livestock indus try in North Carolina. One of the fcaturps nf thn nrn. gram will be a tour of Haywood ouniys livestock farms, includ ing beef cattle and dairy. Among the leading figures who will speak at thn tion to Mr. Balientine, are Lon Ed wards, of Hookerton, president of u e oiaie taim Bureau; R. Flake Shaw nf r.roonru... .ii.Muiu, executive A Vacation Bible School will bev,ce-President of the Bureau- and held at the Riverside Baptist01"- D. W, Colvard, head of the Church the first two weeks in July, N- C State College department of irum i 10 v r. jvi.ii wun me Hay- nax nusDanury, wood County Baptist Missionary ,, . ...wu.v..H. j . : O.HU tviimnnees. com Rev. Farrell as Prinrinal ' Mr Drisine tin CD r,,,i ... .. Laura Messer will assist, with Jen- sist in the arrangements for the uy ... luae nusjvey, secretary, ana session: Grace Erwin, pianist 7 A teacher's meeting will be held on Thursday night; jat the Church as prepalraG(jhigljfM'!i r';! i .' . 4 The teachers are: liBefeiiiners; Reba Metcalf, Laufa Loii Burnette, and Mrs. Harmon Erwin. Primary; Mrs. Alma Chambers, Mrs. Roy Edwards, Jean Metcalf, and Louise Chambers. Juniors; Mrs. Woodrow Chambers, Mrs. Burnette, Mrs. J. Howard Reece, Mr. Claude Single ton, and Mrs. Allie Ledbetter. In termediates; Mrs. Fulton Burnette, Mrs. T. E. Erwin, Messrs. Lewis Sorrells, Coy Pressley, and Edgar Burnette. Animal Show To Be Held Here June 28-29 An animal show, Ameri-Congo World-Wide Animal Expedition, will be held In the parking lot on Main Street next to Stovall's Five and Ten Cent Store next Wednes day and Thursday. The exhibit will run each of those two days from 1 p.m. to 11 p.m. The advance announcement re ports that the Expedition will fea ture the Hollywood Trained Mon keys and Baby Lasca, one of . the smallest elephants in any show now in operation, as well as a wide variety of unusual animals. WANT ADS FOR SALE A new Perfection oil ; stove, and a large size kitchen ' cabinet, both in good condition. "Mabel Cherry, Oxford Road. V Junaluska. June 26-29 LAWN MOWER SERVICE. We - call for and deliver. Phone 296. ..; 306 Brown Avenue, Hazelwood. E. Frady. Jn 22-26-29-Jy 3 FOR SALE Beds with coil springs " $7.50; wood chairs $1.50; Vene- tian blinds; coffee urn $10.00. Parkway Knoll. Phone 9166. ' , . - J 22-26 FOR SALE Grocery store, Serv ice station, three apartments i over store, one six-room house, three four-room houses, five acres of land. See owner of Mc- ' Elroy's St ,rfi, Dellwaod Boad. yh'u: 12(!V.'. J 22 Mr. Yates said committees, com- ArranBempnts v rant TVT f 1 chairman; C. B. McCrary, and Jack McCrackcn; Entertainment T C Davis chairman; Mrs. Henry Francis, and David Boyd; Reception Joe Palmer, chair man; Ed Justice, and K. O Cars well. . . ' upper corner and work downward Flat paints are applied -with semi- handled and well cared for. Wood Carvings Of Indian Artist Are Being Shown Here Wood carvings Of Coins Bark Chiltoskey, widely known Indian artist, are being shown in one of two exhibits of Indian crafts, spon sored by the Haywood County Li brary for a week, beginning today. Chiltoskcy's work is being shown in Slack's store window and the second exhibit including Indian baskets, bead work, dolls, woven articles, and other items, are being shown at the Library. Chiltoskey was born in Chero kee and gave earlv evidence of definite ability in art when he won a medal for woodworking in high school. He spent two years at the Indian School of Crafts, Sante Fe, and later studied in the Handicraft School at Penland, N. C. the Chi cago Art Institute, Oklahoma A and M. College, and Purdue Unl- versity. Exhibits of his work have been held at Rockefeller Center. the University .of North Carolina and in Wauiington, D. C. During World War II his ex traordinary skill as a wood carver was used to advantage. He made scale models of all types for the Engineer Board at Fort Belvoir and when the invasion of Africa was being planned, he helped to construct topographic models on a scale of 1:5,000 of those sections of the country where troops were to be landed. He returned to Cherokee in May 1947 as an instructor of arts and crafts. Paint Procedure When coating a room, the ceiling should be painted first going cross the short way of the room. in painting walls, you start in an ciation who once served as assist Revival Continues At Woodland Church Revival services are continuing through next week at the Wood land Baptist Church. Conducting the series is the Rev. Billy Sorrells, assistant moderator of the Macon County Baptist Asso- ant moderator for the Haywood SfSfi : eS' , Vam iSu and Rev- M- C Wyatt, pastor of the host enamel are flowed on with ever u..i. strokes. Remember that rooms to - n-v. ' .. , , , . . . be painted should be well - .lighted SnnHw .rStaTiH' i 7in and well ventilated . Aisn thi nnH Sunday, are being held at 7:30 p.m. hrnsVinc ara -so irYntr m I Oailyrf The Woodland church's bus op brushes are as important as good paint and should be carefuUv . e tYOUUiana enurens DUS op- red for caies every aay to carry worship pers to tne revival. FADE-OUT FOR HOLLYWOOD WRITERS t:' ' f.. ... ''' ". t. " FAC1N5 d'Jil i i ' At Mr Si i 1 I r A CROWD OF SYMPATHIZERS surround Edward Dmytryk, one of the ten Hollywood writers sentenced to jail for contempt of Congress, as he makes a farewell speech at Los Angeles Airport With four others, he was flown East to begin a sentence as an "unfriendly witness." Two cWc ?jrpa;'v pro n-:rg prjct,n terrr, '.!ii'?rr'!!v:-'i! Tovrrfphnfo 8IOKE AEOCT Zoning (Continued from Pate 1) hearing. , , If and when the final zonina plans are adopted, the plan to- getner with the map will bv in corporated into a new town ordin ance, and the roning requirements men wm Decome law. The zoning Provisions, he ex plained, would not be retroactive: "Waynesville isn t going to get a general overhauling." But the town will make the most of what It has. The primary consideration of the zoning work is that of land use that is, whether an Industry would be permitted In a particular busi ness district, a business house built in an industrial district or In a residential district. Residences, of course, mav be built anywhere. The zoning provisions also would cover front yards, side yards, and heights of buildings. For Instance, they would require that residences be a certain dis tance apart. The ordinance, of course, would not be retroactive. It would bddIv only to proposed new construction. The law also would prevent a man from building a tall structure right beside a small house, and would outlaw "sDlte fen." though these are practically un- Known in mis area now. Mr. Franklin pointed out that the general result also would hp to prevent an increase in an in dividual property owner's fire In surance rates, for instance: as well as protect the value of his property, In his 13 years of servlco with the North Carolina League, Mr. rrankim said, he's never seen the people of a town turn down ing proposal, or seen a town zon- ig ordinance lose a court test. The Asheville native also wnrlrs as a visiting professor at the Uni versity of North Carolina Srhnnl of Law. He teaches the embryo auorneys the practical phases of city government, In addition to Canton, Asheville, and Charlotte! he's helped set ud zoninc? nlans tnr Brevard, Hendersonville, Gastonia, opinaaie, Kutherfordton, Marion Hickory, Gastonia, Albemarle, and Shelby, among others. Asheville. he said was thn iat "big city" in North Carolina tnW up a zoning ordinance, and the job iuuk more man a year. In this case, he was workine as ant. The city officials provided the leg work", . Mr. Franklin has been In Wnvnoe. ville less than four days. But US doubtful that vnn itmiW lose him anywhere in town if you took him out on the most obscure street at night and twirled him around three times blindfolded. In the course of his work, he's Visited every street and allPV w. vilje has, and knows the town al- reaay aoout as well as the oldest native. N. C. Road Unit In Move To Cut Down Fatalities With the July 4th holiday still three weeks away the State De partment of Motor Vehicles made plans to try to cut down the high way death toll. Motor Vehicles Commission Lan don C. Rosser said Highway Patrol men would begin distributing to motorists next week some 40,000 cards carrying a plea for safe driv ing on the Fourth. Rosser said 13 persons were killed in North Carolina highways over the Fourth last year. He said all leave had been cancelled for highway patrolmen this year in an effort to lower the toll. The warning cards carry a pic lure of a patrolman and the mes sage: : .., . "I am your highway patrolman. I will be on the highways of North Carolina constantly during the Fourth of July week-end to pro tect you in your holiday travels. Thirteen persons were killed over the Fourth of July last year. Yau can help me cut down on that tragic toll if you drive safely and sanely this Fourth." Burial Rites Are Held For Mrs. Sam Plott , Interment rites for Mrs. Eliza beth Grahl Plott were held at Green Hill Cemetery Tuesday afternoon with the Rev. Malcolm R. Williamson, pastor of the Presby terian Church officiating. Mrs. Plott, wife of Sam C. Plott, died at her home in Chatsworth, Georgia last Thursday and funeral services were held in the Presby terian Church SllnHav sftornnnn Surviving in addition to the hus band are one daughter, Miss Betty PI?" of Chatsworth; four sons Sam C. Plott, Jr. of the U. S. Marine Corps. Lawrence A. Plott of Ankara, Turkey; Joseph M Plott of San Mateo, California, and Thomas .t. Plntt nf Antmla T.JU... and two brothers, Linwood Grahi of Waynesville and J. Wivno tiraM ' ' UV wtuui of Lima, Ohio. Farm Rett Estate ' The United States department oi agriculture reports that the aver age farm real estate taxes 111m no, 8 er cent in I'M? e'er 1H7, TAXES GO U?-0 112 GCI3 COVM n 'I ' :'. AHER ANNOUNCING that he can't keep his head above water because of high taxes, Paul D. Abbott, 27, a carpenter in Forest, Ind., prepares to be lowered Into Shafer Lake until things change. Not even Neptune had it so good, for Abbott will dwell in a steel and glass tank, equipped with a waterproof food hatch, electricity, cot and a telephone. (International) y bt rniri Ml AH Ufa ail n iiO Haywood County will be well represented at the National Boy Scout Jamboree, which will open next week at Valley Forge, Pa. Every Scout troop in the county will have a delegate at the event. Representing Waynesville will be eight top scouts Jimmy Davis, Malcolm Clark, Charlton Davit, Robert Massie, George Dewey Stov all. Dale Ratcliff e, David Felmet, Jr., and Aaron Gibson. Charlton, Malcolm, and Jimmy are residents of Hazelwood but are members of the Waynesville troop. The boys will leave here by spe cial truck at 7:30 p.m., June 26. At Asheville, they will transfer to Pullmans on the special Jamboree train that will carry Scouts from the Southern states to the event. At Valley Forge, they will par ticipate in a three-day pre-Jam-boree program. The Jamboree will be opened June 30 by President Truman, and will continue through July 6. The Haywood boys will be among 101 Scouts of the (western N. C.) Daniel Boone district who will at tend the event. The moral of the Jamboree this year is "Strengthen The Arm of Oallono! Inmlin-1 4iigt Liberty". s To be eligible to attend J Uonal encampment be second-class Scoufe or be explorer apprenti AH the WaynesvilL Ws' attending as 52 They will wear, U1J green V-neck shirt ofc er scout, and the traitfi ! horts. nllvp,u "'otuf seas can nf k lH : The .oca ZmS ' W estimate L"1 4 "c united Stati from many foreign coiZ 1 will attend thP ilf0Untri1 Dalrr rfu 0 airy cattle or some and calve, that hav. weU are llki . , ' ,un1 . lose weig ' Poultry Bouse Lltt,t ChODDed ctrfii., i j msiae surface posed to absorb water. BKflmmiJ as; m 39c m I Ui im i Tea and coffee are the "double-pldasure" summer beverages satisfying and stimu lating when served hot , . . cooling and re freshing as iced drinks with meals and be tween meals. : iqattnoanpl NUCOA OLEO .... INSTANT TEA .... TEA BAGS SWIFTS JEWEL . PICKLES TEN-B-LOW ItiPkrtJTTmr:: COCONUT JELL-0 1 lb Yellow t4 -Quarters w l w 2Vi-oz. Jar Tenderleaf 100 Count AQft Lipton " Carton WC Quart, CA Swt. Mix WWC Ice Cream Mix 'Jar 8-oz 'Cello Assort. A c Flavor 1 3C Maxwell House 35c 29c MAYONNAISE ... Vienna Sausage .... CHOPPED HAM . PEACHES FRUIT COCKTAIL ORANGEADE CORNFLAKES RITZ CRACKERS. 35c 49c Libby 990 Buffet V MC Libby Duke's Pint Armour 4-oz Can - IC Armour 12-oz Can M Lipton' ' ii 1 WA ?..i,..i..I 20c No. 303 HI-C A 46-oz Can W Kellogg's 8-oz Box Pound Box 13c 32c FRESH EARS '. . .- '. ':'' - ''".'' i. ',: ' Y'"V-" SLICED J3ACON SELECT FRYERS MEAT FRANKS PERCH FILLETS lb. 31c PORK SHOULDER lb. 45c PORK CHOPS 47clb LEMONS 5L 33c CUCUMBERS Spd 21 5c BANANAS S 227c SPINACH ... J- 225c Med. DUZ 27c tvorySoap 323c E 'e- 27C Spic ft Span 2c CAMAY reg: 215c iVOry Flakes, lge. 27c Ti mm lvau m 1 1 ill vlx F PARK ' SHOP " SAVE lU:inh at'? :i'f.y om w"! '"i"""- Ti'tr-ni--rtr"r-wii"Mrii 1 iiW " '"IM",'yMI!''t' 1 SUPER MAnKET) 3
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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June 22, 1950, edition 1
8
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