[- THE WAYNESVILLE MOUNTAINEER |Wer Fines Creek ethodists Form ,w Youth Group ? MRS SAM FERGUSON Community Reporter ueibodist Youth Fellowship *d Sunday evening. ,t I** Lower Flnes f Methodist Church. It will tA each Sunday evening at [5 young folks are urged to k ers are very busy working [Tjnd putting up tobacco in pirt of the county. Mw sink and water heater , yen installed in Fines Creek j, room and work on pump ? will be started soon. rtiur Springs has returned to Dome in South Carolina after ldmg several weeks with his {hter Mrs. Vance Holbrook, on e Creek. y Rev Ben Zeigler plans to lent a play, "Prisoner at the Wednesday evening, Septem 9 at 7:30 in the Fines Creek ooi auditorium. The public is ted to attend. The affair will iponsored by the Community elopment Program. Irs Delta McCracken is expect l) return home Tuesday after iding a week with her son, F. McCracken. at Boone, N. C. Ir and Mrs. Lushion, and chil i Wayne. Mary and Martha, of wit. Mich., visited Mr. and Mrs. Tin Green of Fines Creek over week end. Mr. Lushion is a or. wry Allen, son of Taylor Al bas been seriously ill in an mile hospital and is now at t. rs Will Bradley, formerly of s Creek, is now living in New News, Va.. but is quite ill. Irs. Clyde Trantham and chil i, Wayne and Juanita, left last k to visit relatives in Virginia. Ir. and Mrs. Bob McCrary, of wood, 0., are visiting Mrs. Mc rys father. W. B. Murrey. r Max Carpenter spent last k end with his brother, James penter He is practicing den 7 in Asheville. here were 82.500 seamen em ed on U. S. ocean-going ships ?rly 1953?about 25 per cent i than the same period in t THE REV. GEORGE C. STARR. JR.. pastor of the Central Metho dist Church, Clyde, will preach at the morning Homecoming Service of his church Sunday. Mr. Starr is completing his first year in Clyde and was for the five previous years pastor in Roanoke, Va. (Mountaineer Photo) Crabtree Cannery Open Only On Wednesday The cannery at Crabtree will be open only on Wednesdays from now until the end of the season. The change of schedule was an nounced by Mrs. Rufus Siler. The Central Methodist Church, Clyde, will be the scene of Homecoming services and a pic nic Sunday, September 6. Sun day School will begin at 10 a.m. and .morning worship led by the pastor, the Rev. George C. Starr, Jr., at 11 a.m. The afternoon service will begin at S p.m. Friends, former pastors and members are invited to this event and asked to bring a picnic basket. The church numbers about 300 in membership. (Mountaineer Photo) 24 Have Perfect Recorcf For Month In Fines Creek Memorial Baptist S.S. Twenty-four members of tlie Fines Creek Memorial Baptist Church had a perfect record for attendance in Sunday School for the month of August, it was an nounced Sunday by M. M. Kirkpat rick, superintendent. He also reminded members that the church year is fast slipping away and tht opportunities for a good record will soon be gone. The Ladies Adult Class present ed their teacher, Mrs. Hugh Fer guson, with a beautiful flower vase for her birthday. Mrs. Dave Rath bone read Scripture from the Book of Leviticus and explained briefly and spiritually the feasts of the Lord and the Sabbaticl Year of JuMTe# ' **? Baking fish steaks? Top them with slices of tomato and green pepper and onion rings; baste with melted butter or margarine. Good! The number of producing oil wells in New Mexico in 1953 was 6,800. . ! 1>R. J. W. MOORE, retired min ister of Lake Junaluska. will de liver the sermon at the 2 o'clock Homecoming Service at the j Clyde Central Methodist Church j Sunday. Dr. Moore is also fill I ing temporarily the Rockwood Charge which includes the Rock wood and Plains Methodist Churches. I College Students To Be Honored Sunday By Hazelwood Church The Hazelwood Presbyterian j Church is holding a special "Go I ing to College" Communion- &erv 1 ice. honoring all high school gradu ate* and college students of the church it was announced today by the Rev. Archie G. Graham, Pas (tor. The service will be in the Fel lowship Hall of the Church at 7:30 Sunday evening September 6. The service will be a dedication service followed by the Sacrament of the Lord's Supper, and the presenta tion of the "Going to College Handbooks". Invited to the service are all the above mentioned stu dents and their families, all who have taught them in the Sunday Church School; all elders and dea cons; all young people of the church; and other members of the church, and others in the com munity who would be especially in terested, particularly their high school teachers. The College students and High School graduates are. from Hazel wood: Miss Carolyn Bischoff. James M. Davis. Jr.. Miss Sarah Jane Davis. John Ezell, Claude Greene. J. D. Green, and Miss Norma Jean Winchester, and from Bethel Pres byterian Church: Melvin Earley, and Miss Doris Rollins, Fire Moving Job OTTAWA, Kan. (AP) ? When the fire trucks couldn't go to the fire, they brought the fire to the trucks. A diesel engine caught fire out side the city limits and the trucks were prohibited from leaving < town. The railroad hooked a i switch engine to the train and pull ed it into the city limits where the firemen did their duty. ? Troy Jenkins Dies At 18 Funeral services were held yes terday afternoon in Louisa Chap el at Clyde for Troy Jenkins, 18, who died Monday night in the Haywood County hospital after a long illness. Dr. C. N. Clark, the Rev. J. G. Godwin, and the Rev. George Starr officiated, and burial was in Bon A-Venture Cemetery. Serving as pallbearers were Har old Rhodarmer, E. W. Free, R. D. Ballard. Bobby Sutton, Hal Mc Cracken, and Robert D^aver. Surviving are the widow, Mrs. Doris Hlghtower Jenkins; the mother. Mrs. Faye Jenkins of Clyde; two brothers, Billy Jenkins of Atlanta and a twin of the de ceased, Roy Jenkins of Flint, Mich.; one sister, Mrs. Raul Rog ers of Norwood, Ohio; and the maternal grandmother, Mrs. Cumi Robinson of Asheville. Wells Funeral Home, Canton, was in charge. Seminary Studies To Seminary Studies Blake Breitenhirt, Jr., who for the past three months has been Student Assistant Minister at the Hazelwood and Bethel Presbyter ian Church, will return next week to Union Theological Seminary in Richmond, Va., to resume his stu dies. Mr. Breitenhirt has served Bethel Presbyterian Church as a resident minister during the summer. He served as councellor in the Pres bytery's Pioneer Camp at Camp Hope; preached at Bethel each Sunday except the first Sunday of each month when he preached at Hazelwood; visited the members in the community; and worked with the young people. Under his leadership the Pres byterian Youth Fellowship of Bethel Presbyterian Church has been organized according to the standards set forth by the Youth i Council of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church. Mr. Breitenhirt was well qualified for ? his responsibility for in his Youth Fellowship days served on the As sembly's Youth Council. Mr. Breitenhirt is the son of a Presbyterian Minister, the Rev. B. Blake Breitenhirt, Sr., of Fayett ville, W. Va. He is a graduate of King College, Bristol. Tenn., and is now in his second year at Union Seminary. During his stay in the Bethel community, Mr. Breitenhirt's work has been under the supervision of the Rev. Archie C. Graham, pastor of the Hazelwood and Bethel Pres byterian Churches. Easy Living! CHAMPAIGN, 111. (AP) ? The dark world of the spiny-headed intestinal worm Isn't a bad place to live. According to the late Pro fessor Harley J. Van Cleave of the University of Illinois, a world authority on these little-known worms, they are not like anything in the animal and belong in a separate one of their own. His book, "Acanthocephala of North American Mammals," has been published by the University of Illinois Press. Urbana, $4.00. In his 40 years' study of worms, Prof. Van Cleave found they bury their (large thorny head in the intestines of the animal they at tack. He said the adult worms range in size from the largest, nearly 16 inches long, to the tini est of which 400 would make an inch. Known as "Acanthocephala", these parasites live in seals of the Arctic, birds of South America, whales and even man. They have no sense organs or digestive sys tems. Although they are more of a "pest' 'than a menace, they cause considerable damage. FORMER RESIDENTS here. Rev. and Mrs. Forest C. Maxwell, are shown being presented the keys to a new car by J. Aaron Holmes, in behalf of the congrega tion of the First Baptist Church of F.rwin. Rev. Mr. Maxwell has been pastor of the church for the past 11 years. He and Mrs. Maxwell, and their son. Abe, Shown on the right, lived In Waynesvllle during the early thiVties, when he was circula tion man for a dally newspaper. He left here, entered the seminary, and later be came a pastor. (Cut courtesy Biblical Recorder). Coronation Ball Will Be A Feature Of Labor Day In Canton s Annual Event I A colorful coronation ball, hon oring the queen of Labor Day, is planned for Camp Hope Saturday, September 5 at 10 p.m., it was an nounced here yesterday by A1 Phil lips, chairman of the coronation social feature. Phillips will be assisted with coronation ball arrangements by Guy Teague and Patrick Greeley. The committee was appointed by J. Bruce Morford, president of the Canton-Uethel-Clyde Chamber of Commerce and chairman of the executive committee of the Canton Recreation Commission. Queen contestants can be spon sored by business, professional, fraternal, civic clubs and other groups with "no strings attached". Only requirement will be a mini mum age of 16 for all entries. Those aspiring to Labor Day beauty queen honors will appear in evening gowns on the platform al the Canton High School stadium Saurday, Sept. S at 7:30 p.m. when the queen will be selected by a ??? ' group of impartlaf out-of-town judges. Selection of King Joe, King of Labor Day, will be made by a spe cial committee. A lot of color will be involved in the coronution of the King and Queen during the Camp Hope event. There'll be a complete set ting. including robes, members of the court and all other features necessary for an occasion of this nature. Dancing will follow with an out standing Western North Carolina band furnishing the music. In view of the exceptionally large crowd attending the coronation last year despite inclement weather, the men's regional softball tournament and other conflicting events, spe cial p^ans are being made to ac commodate even a largen attend ance this year, the coronation com mittee has announced. The Labor Day Queen and run ner-up will receive handsome tro phies and all entries will receive a special gift. The Labor Day King and Queen and members of their court will ride on a specially decorated float in the gigantic Labor Day parade Monday morning. Film And Speaker Planned For Episcopal Auxiliary Dinner Meeting Tuesday A general meeting of the Wo man's Auxiliary of Grace Episco pal Church will be held in the Par ish House on Tuesday evening. September 8. at 6:00 o'clock. A covered-dish supper will be serv ed. Mrs. Walter T. Carpenter of Lenoir, Diocesan United Thank Offering Custodian, will be guest speaker for the evening. A Nation al Council film, "Give Unto the Lord." will be shown. All visitors are welcome. Long's Chapel Guild To Meet September 8 The Wesle.van Service Guild of Long's Chapel Methodist Church will meet Tuesday evening, Sep tember 8, at 7:30 at the home of i Mrs. Kenneth Stahl. Mrs. Wallace I Ward will give the devotion, and 1 Mrs. Ruel Noland will have charge of the program. THEY'VE * PASSED THE TEST* I for smart styling! II I ? Yes, every pair of Poll-Parrot Shoes has been P" ''"'* | for ttyle byreal boy, and gtr.s ... and for fir and long wear, too! That's why you .ever rake you buy Poll-Parrots for your youngst ^ II I they'll please through months and moot s o 1 1 wear! See our new selection soon! I i PRICED FROM $J-98 to $S'95 i Imassie'S s 11 lAFF-AfDAY' sacr "Jane wu afraid you might catch her cold, Leslie, so she went out i ' with Sun."-' I % Enjoy Clean, Economical OIL HEAT With This Completely Automatic lm floor furnace ? CLEAN HEAT ? ECONOMICAL ? LOW COST ? LONG LIFE ? DUAL WALL OR FLOOR REGISTER HEATS UP TO 6 ROOMS! 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