Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / June 3, 1954, edition 1 / Page 10
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% Many Visitations In Hominy Area By MRS. MARK SWAIM Common My Reporter The WSCS of the Plains Metho dist church will meet Thursday night at the home of Mrs. Lloyd Jones. The meeting pla:e was changed from the church to Mrs. Jones' home. Mrs. Hershel Hipps presidejt. will preside. The program will be in charge of Mrs. Cliff Hipps and Mrs. Frank Morris. Mrs. Clinton Hall of Mobile, Ala., is visiting in the community this week. p B T. Green and Joan Green, children of Mr. and Mrs. Boyce Green, had their tonsils removed at the Haywood County Hospital' Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Ernest BroyleJ went to Jefferson City. Tenn.. to attend the graduation of their son in-law. Jack Medford from Car son-Newman College. The graduate plans to do religious work. Mr. and Mrs. Holbert Williams went to Newland to visit their daughter. Mrs. Worley Harron this week. Mr. and Mrs. Porter Broyles, Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Trantham enjoy ed a fishing trip to Fontana this week. Mr. and Mrs. Yoder Clark and family, Betty Shipman, ana Mrs. Mark Swaim, visited relatives in Hayesville over the weekend. Mr. and Mrs. Jack McCracken of Morven. Joe Dale McCracken of Camp LeJeune visited their par ents. Mr. and Mrs. Coble McCrack en over the weekend. Joe Dale will return Wednesday to Camp LeJeune, accompanied by his wife Mr. and Mrs. James Mathis and son Kermit, are visiting relatives and friends in Pensacola, Fla. Mr, and Mrs. Phillip Carter are vacationing in Florida this week. Mr. and Mrs. George Hall of Hayesville are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Otha Hall this week. Mr. and Mrs. Olenn Ward of South Carolina are visiting Mrs. Ward's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Ves tal Murr of Oakmont Drive. Old Age Security SHELBY, Miss. <AP>?Dolly, a mule, is 44 years old roughly the enuivalent of 150 for a man?and very few mules ever had it so good ?no work, green pastures and corn cn the cob twice a day. Her owner, D. N. Ray, 69, ex plains: "She's helped me make my liv ing since 1912 and to raise my three children and put them through school. The least I can do is feed her as long as she lives." LEARN AUTO DRIVING WITH DUAL CONTROL CAR Experienced Instructor For Appointment Dial CANTON 2665 HARRIETT GIBSON of faynes vllle recently was elected junior senator at Western Carolina Col lege In an election of student body officers for the year I1S4 55. Beaverdam MYF Elect Officers By MRS. GEO. F. WORLEY Community Reporter The MYF of Beaverdam Metho dist Church met Sunday night and elected officers for this year. Miss Georgia Scott, president; Roy West, vice president; Betty Smathers. sec retary and treasurer; Mary Evelyn Robinson, recreational chairman and Mr. and Mrs. Bill Boone, coun selors. Mr. and Mrs. Dan Stockton en joyed a family-get-together at their home Sunday for dinner. Those who enjoyed the occasion were: Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Parker and Wilburn, Mr. And Mrs. Willie Park er and Thomas, Mr and Mrs. Leth el Stockton and family, Mr. and Mrs. Victor Parker and family, Mr. John Parker and family, Mr. and Mrs. Winifred Mull and baby, and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Elliott and Gerald enjoyed supper with them. Mr. and Mrs. Marion Farmer, Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Parham and family and Naomi and Marie Farm er visited Mr. Farmer's sister, Mrs. Stanley Messer in Newport, Tenn.. during the weekend. Naomi and Marie also visited Miss Pauline Frazier while there. Mr. and Mrs. Chick Trantham and children, Michael and Sandra from Texas are visiting Mrs. Tran tham's mother, Mrs. G. If. Wilson. Mrs. Georgia Sutton had as guest for the weekend a number of rela tives from Gaston County. Kenneth and Frances Best. Jean Surrett and Lee Roy Worle.v visit ed Mr. and Mrs. Joe Byers at Fort Bragg last week. Frances is going to remain with them for sometime. Mrs. Arcie Best is a patient in Haywood County Hospital. She sus tained a broken arm In a fall. Mrs. G. H. Wilson and Mrs. Mrs. Gladys Palmer and children attended graduation exercises at CuUowhee High School Friday night. Highway Courtesy RICHMOND, Ind. (AP>?Several little girls ran across Richmond's main street (IJ.S.401 en route to school. A little shoe flew from one foot in the middle of the busy highway. But the girl couldn't stop because of the heavy traffic. The driver of a big semitrailer stopped, got out as other traffic fped by. picked up the shoe and carried it to its little owner, wait ing anxiously on the curb. News Events Of Saunook Section By MRS. JULIA McCLURE Community Reporter Mrs. Herbert Singletary and children. Kathy and David, left last Monday by plane for Ipswich, South Dakota, where they will spend a month with Mrs. Singletary's moth er. Mrs. Emma Plcton. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hawkins, Mr. and Mrs. James Hawkins and Mrs Margaret Hawkins spent the weekend with relatives in Lenoir. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Sparks of Oak Ridge. Tenn., spent the week end with their parents in Saunook, Mr. and Mrs. John Sparks and Mr. and Mrs. Newton Hall. ? ___________ We wish to take this opportunity j lo Wekome Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kiikland and children in our com munity. The Kirkland family moved into t lie house of Mr. and Mrs. James Garrett on Davis Road recently occupied by the Rupert family. Mr. and Mrs. Kirkland have four cluldren. two sets of twins, all girls. Two of them twelve years of age and. two small girls eleven | months Mr. ar.J Mrs. Hugh T. Anderson . nd Mrs C. M. McClure and daugh ter, Sl.'.llc, were guests Monday of Mr. and Mrs. Edd McCirre at their home on Balsam Road. Miss Frances Wright, who has been leaching jn the city schools | of Statesville. is spending her va cation with her mother, M^s: Hazel Wright. Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Hendticks and children of Augusta, Ga.. were weekend guests of Mrs. Hendricks' parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jeter Car ringer ai their home on Pinnacle Drive. , Mr. and Mrs-. Clifton Shook and children, Tony. Bill and Kitty, vis ited relatives in Bryson City Sun day. Mrs. Joe Queen of Castonia spent the day Tuesday with her sister, Mrs. Lawrence Hooper at her home on Balsam Road. Mrs. W. A. Hendricks and son. William Hendricks, of Winston Salem. were weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. Vaughn Rhinehart. Mrs. Hays T. Watkins and small son, Tommy, of Cleveland, Ohio, are visiting Mrs. Watkins' mother, Mrs. Hazel Wright. Miss Mary Kvelyn Plemmons of Hendersonville, spent last week i nd with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Plemmons. Joel Arrington, Scoutmaster of tlie Saunook troop, took several of the Scouts on a fishing trip to Myrtle Beach, S. C., recently. Mr. and Mrs. Dee Clark and children spent Monday in South Carolina where they purchased a I Shetland Pony. ? Billy Snaihs of Akron, Ohio, is spending a few days in Saunook. having been called to attend the funeral of his grandmother. Mrs. A. H. Sparks. Mrs. James McClure was the hostess of a Tupper Ware party Fri day at her home. Mrs. John Bealock and Mrs. Jerry Rogers, representatives of the Tupper Ware, took orders for var ious items on their list and Mrs. McClure as hostess, received as a gift a bout iful Eavans handbag.' A social hour followed with re freshments served by the hostess, assisted by her daughter. Miss Lynette McClure. Those present were Mrs. George Knight, Mrs. C. 11. Hartman, Miss Phyllis Hartman. Mrs. Bess Brown ing. Mrs. llobart Arrington. Mrs. Mrs. Jeter Carrlnger. Mrs. Howard Arrington. Mrs. Charles Beck, Mrs. THE CRABTREE BAPTIEST CHURCH will cele- ' Crabtree-Iron Duff School. Some alterations have brate its 140th anniversary Sunday with a special been made to the building since this picture was program at the church, which is situated near taken. (Mountaineer Photo) Boyd Evans, Mrs. Orville Cogdill ? Mrs. Medford Clark and Mrs. Julia McClure. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Arrington of Everett, Washington, are visiting Mr. Arrington's mother, Mrs. Rufus Arrington, and other relatives in Saunook community. This is Mr. Arrington's first visit to his native state in many years. Pvt. William G. Arrington of Fort Jackson. S. C.. is spending a thirty-day leave with his wife and his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Guy Ar lington. at their home near the State Fish Hatchery. On his return to Fort Jackson Pvt. Arrington will leave for duty in Austria. Pvt. Willis 'Bud* Smathers of Fort Jackson. S. C., is also home with his wife and infant son for a few days before sailing for Alaska. i Retreiver ? City Breed FLINT, Mich. (AP)?Mrs. Robert Dolan's Irish Setter, Bridget, came home with a four-pelt fur nedk piece. Mrs. Dolan called police. Grace Timmons claimed the minks after a story got into the newspapers. She had dropped them en route home from a party. All was forgiven. wiiere he will be stationed with the V. S. Army. Group Seeks To Wj Girl Scout Founder's HJ By JAINE r.AUS WASHINGTON ? An all-day meeting in the gardens of two pro minent Washington women was held recently to devise means of preserving the Savannah, Ga, birth place and girlhood home of Juliette Gordon Lowe, founder of the Girl Scout movement in the United States. Mrs. Bruce Mcintosh of Miami, Fla.. chairman, and other members of the restoration committee met tirst at the Georgetown home of Mrs. Frederick H. Brooke, wife of a retired Washington architect. A former national president of the Girl Scouts. Mrs. Brooke is hon orary vice president and chairman of the national advisory council. Luncheon was held in the garden of the coach house on the former Robert Todd Lincoln estate across the street, which Mrs. Arthur Woods has converted into one of the area's most handsome resi dences. Tea was served later at the Brooke home. Mrs. Woods, a granddaughter of financier J. P. Morgan and'a direct descendant of Alexander Hamil ton, has distinguished herself in many fields. A former WAC colonel and a former member of the Ford Foundation, she has more recently been active as a trustee of the Na tional Trust in the restoration of I V/oofllawn Plantation, the nearby Virginia estate which George Wash ington gave to Nellie Custis as a wedding present. The purpose of the National Trust is to preserve homes of historic interest. As a former member of the Na tion,! Board of DirwJ Girl Scouts. Mrs i i;<11 > k, ,-n about tin J hkh won th, J the Gn! vUu; t>?" i 1 . innati Wy J 'hi <n<Gome ante-|2M ?ion sold to Gil l Scouts swung im, J l'oi-i- Hi- to purchase3 ci ty. The Gordon hoiu?3 was tiuilt betwea ? 1821 -imI w:i- originally 3 Jjnit's \ Wayne, who*J ? to the Supreme Comb drew Jackson. William Washington0vl chased the residence in3 Juliette Gordon was bo^l I860. While in England^ marriage Mrs. Low >J quainted with Sir Rooenl Powell, originator of tfcl movement tor l>oth boys? She go' the idea of ctf the Gii! Scout movemJ country. On her return J n;.lt in i'1 I'd she set abostl the new oi ganization ant 1 her own niece, Daisv Gal the first recruit. "Today! Scouts ot ganization mimkJ than two million membeol Von/'rm\ WAMTAtt ^PflREIITPROBfflS Children Should Have Some Outdoor Home Jobs lv CARRY (LfVfLANB MYtlt. Wi.B. IT'S amazing how many moth ers with able-bodied children from eleven to fifteen mow the lawn regularly alone. Even more fathers of such children mow the lawn. For either parent. It might be good reducing exercise. But this Is rarely the reason they do It Usually, the parents do such Jobs themselves because their children never have been edu cated to share In hotne responsi bilities. They have not been trained In earlier years to do les ser. lighter Jobs. Indeed, the aver age child does very few regular Jobs about the home; and It's rather unusual to see a boy or girl mowing a lawn, cultivating the flowers and vegetables of the gar den, raking leaves In autumn or shoveling snow In winter. A Reasonable Share A well-brought-up child does a reasonable share of the various Jobs about the home. Where there are several children who are old enough, they take tarns doing the more arduous, less attractive Jobs. Often, such assignments and a work program are decided in a kind of family council. Wen then, the parents see thet each child shoulders his responsibility. Many parents have been per suaded by the sttly doctrine so widely disseminated by "experts'' that children should not be nude to do what they dont want to do, but that parents ahowM find ways to make all Jobs about the borne so attractive that the children will choaee readily to do them. Parents ' Failures" Fatting to make this work,most parents suppose thdy have not ICmtHSK INI. S>?? 1 been skillful enough at making the Jobs attractive. Many moth ers write to condemn themselves for this failure. It doesn't occur to them how absurd It Is to sup pose most regular Jobs can be made so alluring that the child will Just choose of his own free will to do them. Finally disillusioned, the par ent may, In desperation, argue ! with the child, accuse him of lazi ness and lack of love, or try to force him to do certain Jobs By that time. It's pretty late to find effective measures. When Child Is Paid 8ome parents resort to paying the child for these Jobs. This often leads him to strike fre quently for higher wages. They In turn try to force him to do the Job to win the pay. Of course, where a Job like stowing the lawn has been done by hired help, there may be eome sense to paying an older child who applies for the Job and does It faithfully. Usually, however, paying a child for Jobs about the home Is unsound procedure. Good Equipment If your child mows the lawn, provide him with a mower that cute well and-with keen grass shears to do the trimming. If you have a child of 5 or 6, now Is the time to prepare him gradually to do some regular Jobs about the home and to be ready to mow the lawn dependably when he Is twelve or fourteen. (My bulletin, "How To Teach Tour Child To Help at Home," ' may be had by sending a self addressed, stamped envelope to I m# In care of this newspaper) teiue Brvltwu, 1m.) 42 Years Apart MRS. HELEN HUVAR (right). $7, Kisses her sister, Mrs. Hermine Kelemen. 79, M they meet for the first time In 49 yeers et New York's IdltWild Airport It tofk eight yeers to get Mrs. Kelemgn out of Budapest, Himgsry, sM bring her to the Unite* States. 9 Why drive a "down payment"? Trade now for a new | FORD Afow/ Gas-Saving, LOW-FRICTION, High-Compression, Overhead-Valve, Deep-Block Engines in ALL models! 115 fo 170 h-P.I V-8's and Six! Only in FORD Trucks! Get new Driverixed Cabs; and time-saving controls like new Powbr Steering, new Power Brakes, Fordomatic Drive! Fop payload capacities. Over 220 models including new tandem axle giants, factory-built by Ford! * '?Mavinc Low-Friction engine in e a i mo^el you choose. For tiie power th* eve op, Ford Truck engines for '54 have less cubic u> isplacement than other-make engines. SmaUer-displn jnent engines normally need less gas! New contf Power Brakes for ^-tenners, Power St* ?nf' ??n?tlc Drive, repay low extra cost in er handling. So, why drive a "down paym?" a e your present truck in today for a Big allow** COME M TODAY/ Mama truck !*e?g?j0g r)W for your money! *? - *? f ??.?. . , I \ POWll I I*V'W? II MONtV-SAVINO I lL__ Jl**" II CAMCr.ES | ?W"6? M0T0R"M~ ' 9 ??e Your Ford Dealtr* i 1 in,.
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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June 3, 1954, edition 1
10
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