A PAGE ABOUT THE AREA DEVOTED TO Q* Information For Visitors are thron m from germs in infected cr-,ru t (RE IS WHERE Ql) CAN SAVE... Im you drive the new -/few ll/iY/ifs Nrners of ihe new Aero lillvs equipped with over riie. according to a nation magazine, report averag I i"1.} miles per gallon, era U'illys have delivered i to 35 miles per gallon. tfyle-.tor safety..for economy jrov'rt way ahead with an AERO WILLYS Tour Willys Dealer Today POTTS OTOR CO. 205 Haywood Street Waynesville, N. C. -7 ? 1 I LET THEM HAVE FUN They're only young once! Don't curb their fun with "kecp-your-clothes clean" warnings. We'll keep all their washables sparkling clean for pennies-per-day ... so let their joy be unconfined! I WAYNESVILLE LAUNDRY "Particular Cleaners For People Who Care" Fred Shcehan ? Joe Liner Boyd Avenue LEAVE IT TO US TO DO IT RIGHT When something goes wrong with your i tor, leave it to us to make it rig / fW! Our skilled technicians KNUvv tors inside and out. They don t was their time ? and your money in guess 1 work and experimentation. For promp , 1 Spendable service, see us. r ^tinger MOTOR CO. ' Dial GL 6-4685 T ' - ' 1 ?TTT-"T- T Part 01 County Working On United Fund Program; Invite Agencies To Join The Admissions Committee of the United Funds, Canton-Bethel Clyde, Inc., is definitely under way in obtaining applications from various organizations to join United ^und, according to Dr. Hugh Mat thews, president. Organizations joining include agencies and groups existing in the area which are engaged in health, welfare, charitable, recreational, and char acter building activities and serv ices, he explained. Upon being ac cepted as institutional members they will benefit by the annual fund raising activities of the United Fund. United Fund invites any organ ization or agency in this area who falls within the categories in Dr. Matthews' statement to advise F, I. Newman or any of his commit tee members of their desire to participate. Thus their applications may be reviewed in the near future and processed without delay. The application blank, available now, calls for information pertain ing to the background, purposes and functions of the prospective institutional member and the names of two persons who shall be authorized to represent the or ganization. The organization agrees on the application that it knows the objects of United Fund, agrees to cooperate with it, accept the appor tionment of funds allotted to it by the Board of Directors, and not to solicit funds independently unless it has the written consent of Uni ted Fund. Committee members whtf will lend assistance in filing applica tions, besides Newman, include Fred Ferguson, Alton Phillips, J. R. Sechrest, Roy McKinnish, Hugh Terrell and Grover Haynes. Having been notified by the Sec retary of the State of North Caro ' lina that the United Fund of Can ton-Bethel-Ciyde, Inc., had been granted its Charter of Incorpora tion, the^incorporators met again ^ ?i\day night", Auguii 'tfief coi Southern Baptist Librarian To Hold Canton Meeting Msis Florida Waite, secretary of churclt library promotion, Baptist Sunday School Board, Nashville, will be among the outstanding per sonalities who will be leading con terences at the Church Library Conference to be held at the First Baptist Church, Canton. Miss Waile will lead the conference for pastors, and the Church Library Committees. The Church Library Conltrcnce will be held Septem ber 11th, 2:30 p.in. at the First Baptist Church. Canton. Miss Jo Gwin, manager of the Baptist Book Store, Charlotte, will also Tead a conference. Mite Gwin will lead the conference on book firmed the election of the Board of Directors which in turn confirmed the election of officers and moved to adopt the By-laws under which the organization will operate. Dr. Hugh Matthews advised the Board of the selection of members of the Campaign Committee, whose job it will be to guide the fund raising activities of the United Fund. The General Chairman is Glenn Simmons of the Champion Motor Company. According to Dr. Matthews, Simmons has had previ ous experience in the United Fund Campaign in Asheville. Serving with him are Co-Chairman J. W. Winfrey of Clyde, Kin McNeil of Bethel and Loranzo Smathers of Canton. The Campaign Committee is ex pected to call upon individuals and organizations for assistance until every person in the Cantoni-Bethel Clyde area may be assured of be ing advised of the nature of Uni ted Fund and its advantages and ?pportu??tSji to become a contributing member. Directors attending the Board meeting included Dr. Matthews, J. M. Barnes, Mrs. Noah Swafford, Paul Murray, Hugh Terrell, the Reverend C. J. Lime, Henry Sea man, Louis Gates, and Scott Har vey. LAST OF OROWNEI) SOLDIERS RECOVERED ?The body of a soldier lies covered on a stret cher after it was pulled from the lake in the back ground on the Ft. Bragg reservation. The victim was one of 20 trainees who lost their lives in a mishap while on routine training mission. Author ities said that the men were riding on two en gineer assault eraft boiled together and were being returned to shore from a section of a pon toon bridge. (AP Wlrephoto). Top Finance Executives Of Methodist Church End Three-Day Session At Lake Top executive officers of 23 Methodist boards and agencies yesterday elected D. Stewart Pat terson of Washington, D. C. presi dent of their Council of Secre taries. The church officials are here to make their several financial re ports to the Council of World Serv ice and Finance which collectively serves as a kind of comptroller for the denomination. Patterson, who is lay leader of the Baltimore Conference, is the executive secretary of the Metho dist Commission on Chaplains. Vice presidents chosen were Miss tHenrietta Gibson of New York, tre^nrer of the Woman's Division, and Dr. John O. Gross of Nashvillfc, Tenn., executive secretary of the Division of Educational Institu tions. The Kev. Horace W. Williams of Nashville, executive secretary of the committee on Missionary Education, was continued as secre tary of the Council of Secretaries. Whether clergymen should be put under social security was one selection for the church library and will also give a book review. Miss Gwin is well qualified to lead the discussion on book selection for the church library. Few people know books and their importance as Miss Gwin knows them. She is truly an expert in the field. The Church Library Conference will start at 2:30 p.m. and will close at 3:00 p.m. The program has been well planned and will be as practical as possible. The last item on the program for the evening will be Jhe presentation of a play let emphasizing the ministry of the church library. This playlet will be under the direction of the li brarian of the First Baptist Church, Canton, Miss Cordelia Johnson. Young people of the First Baptist Church will participate in the playlet. of the subjects under considera tion by the executives. No conclu sions were reached, the matter be ing referred for further study. Pen sion officials of several denomina-, tions later this month will attempt j to reach agreement on a legisla-1 tive proposal on the subject, Dr. Charles Calkins of Chicago, Meth odist pension board head, told the secretaries. George lluggins, a Philadelphia actuary and social security specialist, addressed the Council and answered questions. A 72-minute color film on the life of John Wesley, Methodism's founder, will be ready for release ! about November 1, Dr. Harry C. I Spencer of Nashville told the offi- j eials liere. Filmed last spring in 1 England, in some cases on the ver-; itable locations, the illin had the cooperation of J. Arthur Hank, British film magnate. Hank's intro duction to the film business was through an initial interest as a Methodist layman in religious films. The Wesley film was pro duced at a cost of $154,000. An office directly across from the United Nations in New York in the Carnegie Foundation for Interna tional Peace Center has been opened. World Service Council members were told, to aid the Methodist Board of World Peace. This board, located in Chicago, will have a New York headquar ters for its executive secretary, Dr. Charles F, Boss, Jr. in connec tion with his observation and con sultative relationships with the UN and will be a center to which visiting Methodists may obtain as sistance in carrying out their UN interests. The office will facilitate the numerous seminars of Metho dists which have been coming to New York to study the UN. Officers of the Council on World Service and Finance were re-elect ed as follows: president, Bishop Clare Purcell, Birmingham, Ala.; DULANF BOTTLED AND METERED SERVICE GAS APPLIANCES Domestic or Commercial Installations DIAL GL 6-5071 MOODY RULANE, Inc. 902 N. Main Where's ? . . . where his budget is never "taken for a ride". Eat here reg ularly for one week?and see how much vou.save! 3% SIR CHRISTOPHER WREN "Neither shalt thou profane." Lev. In London we are told that when . .? . St. Paul's was built by Christopher Wren ... He gave his workers this decree . . . That cursing and impiety . . . Were banished and if one should use . . . Profanity that he would lose . . . His rijfht to work, for it would be . . . Contempt of God's authority ... Let's follow his experience . .. And treat God's name with reverence. JULIEN C. HYER WELLS FUNERAL HOME Dial 2371 Canton, N. C. HOWELL'S ESSO SERVICE (?sio) ?|*U? Tirr* - Batteries - Accessories KXPKRT LUBRICATION WASHING - WAXING DIAL GL 6 9195 WATCH Repairing Guaranteed For ONE YEAR Bring It To P|,2iXjiLii?jn James Light Moved To Gatlinburg By Nat'l Park Service Superintendent Edward A. Hum mel has announced the change of headquarters of Assistant Chief Ranger James B. Light from Bry son City, to Gatlinburg. Tenn. Light has been with the National l'ark service since March 16, 1932. with various assignments in the j Great Smoky Mountains National Hark. He was previously with the Indian Service in Montana and Arizona. He has served as Assist I ant Chief Ranger since 1935 in which position he has been assign ed to the North Carolina section of the park. Light is a graduate of the Uni versity of Minnesota with a de gree in forestry. He and Mrs. Light and their two daughters, Hetty and Ruth, are expected to move to Gatlinburg about the first of Sep tember, and will occupy one of the park residences in the Twin Creeks area. Betty and Ruth will attend school in Gatlinburg. Light has been active in the Bryson City Rotary Club and HTA, having served as Hresident of . both. Mrs. Light has been active in the Nantahala Girl Scout Council and the HTA. I . The female hornbill, an African bird, walls herself up with mud inside a hollow tree at nesting time, but leaves a small hole through which her mate feeds her and the young. 1 r Advance Notice HOBBS, N. M. (AP)?If his mem ory is that good, a Hobbs book j keeper will answer that overpark I ing summons he found on his wind-, shield recently. By mistake, the ticket cited him to appear in Municipal Court July 16, 1957. vice president, Bishop G. Bromley Oxnam. Washington, D. C.; record ing secertary, George B. McKibbin, Chicago. ^/or ? ASHEVILLE'S NEW THUNDER LAND A DRAMA With Mountain Music Based On The Life Of DANIEL BOONE COMPANY OF 105 LIGHTED PARKING AREA FOR 1800 CARS 1200 SEATS 1.50 Others 2.00-2.50-3.00 Children I'ndrr It Halt Price ASHEVILLE'S FOREST AMPHITHEATRE NIGHTLY at 8:15 ? EXCEPT SUNDAY TO SEPT. 7 1 ?? CHARLIE'S TEXACO SERVICE OPEN 24 HOURS A DAY ONE OF THE MOST COMPLETE SERVICE CENTERS IN W. N. C. B. F. GOODRICH TIRES & TUBES FOR ROAD SERVICE DIAL GL 6-4971 SAVE up to 50% on FUEL WITH SIEGLER'S EXCLUSIVE PATENTED TWO-IN-ONE HEATMAKER! Look at these exclusive SIEGLIR features , ? Two-in-One Heatmaker ? Saves up to 50% in fuel ? Sieglermatic Draft ends soot and smoke ? Silent-Floating super quiet motor mount ? Lifetime porcelain enamel finish * ? 6-way directional Tropical Floor Hedt ? Cast iron construction ? Kleen-Fire burner, cleans as it heats ? Summer cooling at the turn of a switch C. N. ALLEN CO. Dial GL 6-3221 Main Street, Hazclwood

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