Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / July 11, 1955, edition 1 / Page 9
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A PAGE ABOUT THE AREA DEVOTED TO t Information For Visitors THIS OROl'P COMPRISES the music staff is summer at the Lake Junaiuska Methodist sembly. and is the nucleus of the Junaiuska agers directed by Prof. Cyrus Daniel, director music at Vanderbiit University, Nashville, nn. Left to right: Miss Laipra Ann Harris, prana, Goodlettsville, Tcnn.; Miss Eugenia 10I0, assistant organ|st, Augia| a, Ga.: Miss i Charlotte Stuart, alto. Jackson, Tenn.; Beaman Griffin, tenor, Troy, N. C.: Prof. Daniel, and Willard DeLara, bass. Norfolk, Va. In addition to providing special music at daily programs, the group will assist Prof. Daniel during the annual Institute of Music at Lake Junaluska, August 1-12. (Grenell Photo) Irary To Have Film iwing For Adults le second in a summer series tlm showings for adults will [Id at the Haywood County Li r Friday, July 15, at 10 a.m. e films will be "Grandma te," "Life Along the Water r "Famous Fish I Have Met," Although only iron, nickel and cobalt have marked magnetic pro perties, among the pure metals, some alloys of other metals also are magnetic. and "Living Birds." All adults are invited and a child of school age coming with an adult will be admitted. I CHARLES SERVICE ROAD SERVICE WASHING ? WAXING ? LUBRICATION DAYTON TIRES & TUBES BATTERIES & ACCESSORIES Bial GL 6-4053 Charles Balentine, Owner sportsmen's headquarters ? FISHING ? BASEBALL ? GOLF <? ? TENNIS tParkman's Hardware in Street ? Waynesville ? mountain crafts I SOUVENIRS AND GIFTS You Are Cordially Invited To Come In And Browse Around Ranch s house of crafts ?. S. 19 Adjacent West Entrance to Lake Junaluska ^K ?:^r. >; ^Vr^H^*m TV repair calls for expert analysis and skilled I I work. We'll solve your sot's problem quickly M: 9 and expertly. We're as near as your telephone nj Art Exhibit Now Looking For New Home A Haywood County are exhibit, originally scheduled for July 23-31, is now "homeless." The announcement of the exhib it was made last Thursday, but the ' next day the Hallett Ward build ing (formerly James. Furniture Store) was rented by its owner. Mrs. Grace Stamey, in charge of arrangements for the cultural im provement committee of the Cham ber of Commerce, is now looking for a new site for the exhibit ?? in the business section, if possible. Present Indications are that the event will be postponed until early August. The closest batting race in the major leagues occurred in 1931. Chick Hafey won the National League title with .3489, while Bill Terry had .3486 and Jim Bottom ley hit .3482. FLAT ROCK PLAYHOUSE V ft U. S. 25, 2 mi. So, fci? of Hendersonville i?il Broadway Plays & Players "Time Out. For M Vi Ginger" A Must For The m Whole Family! I Tues. thru Sat., 8:30 Wed. & Sat., 2:30 Popular Prices RESERV.: Hendersonville 7565 Judge Alley (Continued from Page 2) and colleges and elsewhere, like Judge Alley has done. And now as to his record as judge: He was seventeen years on the bench, including his two years as emergency judge. In this time he held courts in most of the counties of our state, having heard many very important cases both civil and criminal. Some of these cases required as much as two weeks time to hear. On appeal he has been sustained by the higher courts in 93 per cent of the cases?a remarkable record. Has had to pronouce the death sentence on twelve defendants dur ing his years on the bench. Speak ing of this unpleasant duty. Judge Alley said that while under the law he could do nothingfelse, it always Weighed heavily upon him. "Think ing of wives, children and parents weeping." he said, I have lain awake most of the night unable to sleep." WAS CONSIDERATE AND COURTEOUS "Durihg my ?service," Judge Alley said, "I have never spoken an unkind word to lawer, jury, witness or the spectators. While, of course. I've had to call down or reprimand sometimes, I always tried to do it in as kind a manner as I knew how." His sympathy for and attitude toward young criminals was com mendable; since, as he often said, if and whenever the courts saved a youthful criminal by getting him "started on the right road"-r-then they have saved a life. Now 82, Judge Alley in the quietude of his home on Boyd Avenue, where he rests, reads? and sometimes meets friends, paus ed as if in silent, sober reflection. "I have been a member of the Methodist Church since I was four- ' teen year old," he said. "I'Jiave, I of course, made mistakes; but I am glad to be able to say that I have tried to so live that these mistakes are not grievous ones. And 1 know this morning that the Christ in whom I believe is my shepherd. . . " Here the tears welled up?and in the face of a noble, kind and tender-hearted man was shown in truth of the testimony. Note: The writing of these sket ches has been a "labor of love." If they meet with the favorable reception of Judge Alley, his fam ily and many friends we shall be glad. And if they be the means of encouraging and inspiring only a very few of our aspiring young folks, our work will not have been in vain. Broom Sale Nets Canton Lions $500 With some money still to be turned in, preliminary reports have disclosed that the Canton Lions Club netted more than $300 in its recent broom sale to finance club projects for the blind. J. L. Sprinkle was In charge of arrangements for the sale. The winning sales team was headed by L. A. Coman. *7/^ bourne, JlouAe, GOOD\OOD MAIN STREET WAYNESVILLE AT ITS OPEN YEAR ROUND BEST ? ALL HOME COOKED MEALS SUPERBLY SERVED HC"" or ?" DIAL GL 6-3559 ?ota?* club MRS. SAM H. JONES ownkr.-opckatoii* MRS. JAMES T. JONES Duncan Hines and AAA Recommended EAGLE STORES CO. 5 & 10 YOUR 5 & 10 He adquarters For BETTER VALUES i ????? HOT-WEATHER 2 regular JtQf 431 /orsV^ S p e c i a 1 BOXER SHORTS 4 for $laQO MISS LILLIAN JOHNSON ?raffrt ^wawox rfflMiwru^ mmm&*ms>, vm&sijummmUL MisS tLAivA ri\t,\iH METHODIST WOMEN LEADERS serving on the faculty of the School of Missions under way at the Lake Junaluska As sembly include Miss Lillian Johnson and Miss Clara French, both of the New York headquarters of the Woman's Division of the Methodist Boafd oX Missions. Miss Johnson is administrative sec retary of the Wesleyan Service Guild, and Miss French is execu tive secretary of missionary work in China and Southeast Asia. The school, sponsored by the Methodist Woman's Society of Christian Service, is attended by 250 delegates from nine south eastern states and Cuba. It will close Thursday. Methodist Women Pledge $1/692,470 For Mission Work At Home And Abroad Methodist women of nine south eastern states and Cuba have pledged a record $1,692,470 for missionary work at home and abroad during the next year. The sum is an increase of $95, 334, nearly six per cent, over last year it was announced by Mrs. B. R. Stout, Knoxville, Tenn., treas urer of the Methodist Woman's Society of Christian Service in the Southeastern Jurisdiction. Presidents and treasurers of the WSCS in 17 annual conferences made the pledges for their respec tive organizations at a special ser vice during the society's School of ^Missions under way at the Lake ' Junaluska Methodist Summer As sembly. Mrs. Stout presided at the ser vice, and the pledges were accept ed by Mrs. E. U. Robinson, Galla tin, Tenn., southeastern president of the WSCS, and Miss Henrietta Gibson, New York, national treas urer of the Woman's Division of the Methodist Board of Missions. The money will be used to help finance the program of the Wo man's Division in the United States and 24 foreign countries, includ ing schools, hospitals, settlement houses, rural projects and mission ary personnel. The nation-wide pledge of the WSCS for this pur pose exceeded $3,000,000 last year, Miss Gibson reported. The so cieties raise an almost equal sum every year for projects in their local churches, she said. Conference WSCS pledges in the Southeastern Jurisdiction are as follows: Alabama, $84,000; Cuba, $95,000; Florida. $132,000; Holston. $120,000; Kentucky, $65,000; Louis ville. $57,000; Memphis, $78,500; Mississippi, $68,^00; North Ala bama, $95,000; Nortfi Carolina, $122,375; North Georgia, $145, 000; North Mississippi, $55,000; South Carolina, $140,000; South Georgie, $120,000; Tennessee, $90, 000; Virginia, $180,000; Western North Carolina, $140,000. The 425,000-mile network of natural gas transport lines are composed of underground pipes crisscrossing the United States. 34 Countries To Have Delegates At Junaluska For Conference In 1956 The World Federation of Metho dist Women will meet at Lake Junaluska August 27-30, 1956, it was announced by the vice presi dent, Mrs. Paul Arrington of Jack son, Miss. She said delegates and visitors from 34 countries will represent the federation's membership of ap proximately 4,500,000 women. Lake Junaluska is the site of he Methodist Church's Southeast ern Assembly, summer program headquarters for a nine-state area. Mrs. Ottilia De O'ChkVes of Porto Alegre, Brazil, is president of the federation. The secretary is Miss Saturnina Lara, Philippine Islands. Mrs. J. W. Masland, Phila delphia, Pa., is treasurer. New of ficers are to be elected to four year terms at the quadrennial meeting here. The women's meeting will be preliminary to an international Methodist conference here Sep tember 2-16, 1956, under the auspicies of the World Methodist Council. The last such conference was held In 1951 at Oxford Uni versity, England. Mrs. Arrington said federation delegates will vote on a proposal to affiliate with the council, a co operative body of some 40 Metho dist communions. Miss Dorothy McConnell of New York, co-editor of World Outlook, monthly magazine of the Methodist Board of Missions, is program chairman for the federation's meeting. She said the emphasis will be on Christian citizenship education, spiritual life, and "how to" discussions of organizational methods and program planning. Mrs. Arrington and Miss Mc Connell are serving on the faculty of the annual School of Missions under way here, sponsored by the southeastern Methodist Woman's Society of Christian Service. Nothing Sells Like Newspapers \ MfcCglE COUHTBY SXGVE |g <$>? Lm '/1 Jtef! r-^, <?.. SPECIALS Sunbonnets, Jelly Beans and Feather Dusters. You can buy a genuine Maytag J for scarcely more than you'd pay toe the loweat-priced waaherl / W \ I \| law dawa payment Liberal trade-la IJ \ I ROGERS ELECTRIC CO. OIAL GL 6-6351 MAIN STREET ( ? KJ V j u^B ^| ? i 1 Ife | _J ^ !?? HH^ J ? ^ i k I B k ' ii ?i'l B * [i] ?j -jB B|liMaBA^BnKBaiiiHMaHAiMaaMB| I J V I iL! J B llHIll I I u * H ill LJ III" B I I fl Two for the price of one! Buy RCA Victor's exciting HeB I Jr* m. ^\:' new 21-inch Dorrance now ^^HiT > ,jarF~^jL\ ?and welt give you a cus- ^HH V ^w9t^mQ | tom-styled matching stand i^"^4aL^L ^ But you must act now. K y; * Hew Overtlie Picture Tube ? biggest M^BflHR 21" TV I * "AH-Cleer" Picture - wills M\^^Sj^B//SBS3fr 212% greoter picture controstl W * New MMe?lc Monitor" M fflf I ? ctieuu. I ? $209.95 * "Golden Threet" Fidelity f ? H Soeed. M ICA Victor Standi ? ___________ V Oorronce. Sleet ebony B V fWsiA. Model 31S5I0 B for MMf?New MiqK Speed UMf Tuner B Fiee Stood otsoovoBoblo I h t tieei foster ion previous continuous ? wbb Model 21S5II. mo- ? tuners. (Optional, at extra cost.) | roott fluids. * Ad about As tvebsive ICA Victor factory Service Caafcmf. $219.95 MOODY RULANE, Inc. Dial GL 6-5071 ' 902 N. Main Street OIIBII 'I'" Ml Mill M I ft MS SI H ? w LONG DISTANCE add pleasure to ? Phone ahekd for Reservations t -i "? 4 ? Phone Friends along the way ? Keep in touch with home i Before you go. Call the Telephone Business Office and ask for a Long Distance Credit Card. Then you can charge calls from any telephone, anywhere, to your regular telephone bill. Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Company iuW' **?*?*?? : - :??? ??? ?,? imm tv <J- \ 4
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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July 11, 1955, edition 1
9
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