Jnnalnska August Program Fealnres Eight Conferences DR. KARL P. MElsTKK, execu tive eeereury of the Metboflist Board of Hospital and Homes, Chicago, will be one of the speakers at a regional Institute for superintendents and house parents of Methodist Children's Homes, today through Friday at Lake Junaluska. The institute is sponsored Jointly hy the Chicago hoard and the Woman's Division of the Methodist Board of Mis sions, New York. Bishop Lloyd C. Wicke. Pittsburgh, Pa., will also he a speaker during the Insti tute sessions, under way at Lam buth Inn. Three Hurt (Continued from page 1) hitting another car bearing two Waynesville firemen on their way to answer an alarm at the Juna luska Supply Co. The latter ve hicle, the patrolman said, cut across the path of the Sheffield car. As Miss Sheffield stopped her car unexpectedly, it was struck from the rear by a 1954 Chevrolet driven by Floyd Davis of Waynes ville. Damage to both cars was estimated at $400. Patrolman Wooten was assisted In the Investigation by Cpl. Prltch ard Smith. Deri Rex Owen, 23, of Canton, was admitted to Haywood County Hospital at 3 a.m. Friday after he demolished his 1953 Ford on N. C. 110 Just north of Murray Road in front of the T. E. Shook residence. Patrolman V. E. Bryson reported that Owen lost control of his car on a curve, causing it to skid 150 feet on the highway, 222 feet in a ditch on the left aide of the high way, and another 49 feet diagonal ly across the road. The vehicle tore out several small culverts In the ditch and then overturned. The car was owned by Deri's father, Paul Owen, and was a total loss. The patrol charged the youth with exceeding the safe speed i limit and driving on the wrong side of the road. The Canton-Bethel road was the scene of another wreck last week when Leo Edwards lost control of his 1949 Ford, which tore down a fence and struck a peach tree near the Osborne farm at 9:45 a.m. last Wednesday. Damage to the car was estimated at $350. Edwards was charged with driv ing on the wrong side of the road. J. C. Penney (Continued from Page 1) responsibility, by making them feel that 1 relied upon them." 5. "I believe In appealing to the spirit of men. One of the wisest men who ever lived said: 'For the letter killeth, but the spirit giveth life'." 6. "I believe in a practical ap plication of the Golden Rule. The Golden Ruse is one of the most fundamental laws that can be ex pressed in words. We find it spe cifically stated in the literature of 11 major religions. The Golden Rule is the law of love. It under lies all true religions." While in Waynesville, Mr. Pen ney has been visiting at the sum mer home of his son. Roswell K. Penney on Longview Drive. - The August program of the southeastern Methodist summer asaembly at Lake JunaJuska leads off with a Southwlde Leadership School and a national Church Mu sic Institute, and continues through the month with a total of eight con ferences. First term of the Leadership School is set for August l-?. and the second term August 8-12. spon sored by the Methodist Board of Education, Nashville, Tenn., un der the direction of the Rev. M. Earl Cunningham. He said at least 400 officers, teachers and other church school leaders will be enrolled for the leadership education courses, fea turing workshops, classes and dis cussion groups, and a special labo ratory school for workers with children. Platform speakers at evening sessions will Include the Board of Education's three executive secre taries?Dr. John Q. Schisler, Divi sion of the Local Church; Dr. John O. Gross, Division of Educational Institutions, and Dr. Henry M. Bul lock, editor of church school pub lications, all of Nashville?and the Rev. Harold M. Robinson. Thomas ville; Dr. Thomas Morrow of York shire, England, and Dr. Traeey K. Jones, Jr., of the Methodist Board of Missions staff in New York. Church musicians and singers of more than 20 states are expected at the annual Music Institute, also scheduled for two terms, August 1-6 and 8-12. It will be directed by Cyrus Daniel, director of music at Vanderbilt University, Nash ville. The faculty will include Dr. John Milton Kelly, professor of sacred music at San Anselmo, Calif., The ological Seminary; Dr. J. Edward Moyer, professor of church music at Westminster, Md? Theological Seminary; the Rev. Walter Towner, staff member of the Methodist Board of Education, Nashville, and Miss Mary Malone, representative of New York music publishers. A regional institute of super intendents and house - parents of Methodist children's homes will be held August 1-3, sponsored by the Methodist Board of Hospitals and Homes, Chicago, and the Woman's Division of the Methodist Board of Missions. New York. A weekend convention for church school superintendents and other Sunday School adult leaders will be held August 12-14. Direct , ing the convention will be the Rev. Walter Towner, head of general church school work at the Metho dist Board of Education. Nashville He will be assisted by a facultv of 12 leaders in the field of Christian education. A highlight of the summer sea son will be the fifth annual Cand ler Camp Meeting and Conference on Evangelism. August 14-21. spon sored by the Methodist Board of Evangelism, Nashville. Speakers and leaders will in clude Bishop Arthur J. Moore. At lanta. Ga.; Dr George A Fallon Cleveland. Ohio; the Rev. A. E. Acey, Danville. Va.; the Rev. Wavne A. Lamb. Memphis. Tenn.; William B Thomas, song leader, of Charlotte, Dr. C. Lloyd Daugh erty and the Rev. Thomas A. Car ruth of the evangelism board. Nashville. A Southwide School of Alcohol ; Studies and Christian Action, soon ' sored by the Methodist Board of Temperance, Washington. D. C.. is scheduled August 15-19. Dr. Cara dine Hooten, executive secretary of the board, will direct the school. The Rev. Brunner M. Hunt, Meri dian. Miss., chairman of the South eastern Jurisdictional Board of Temperance, will serve as dean. Business managers, treasurers and other local church administra tors in the Southeast will meet August 16-19 for their second an nual Conference on Church Man agement. James G. White of First Methodist Church, Charlotte, is president of the organization, and the Rev. Webb B. Garrison, staff member of the Methodist Board of Education, Nashville, will direct the conference. Closing out the summer series of Southwide meetings will be a Methodists Will Honor Retiring Executive 3rd DR. JOHN O. SCH1SLER The Rev. John Q. Schisler, prominent Methodist official of i Nashville, Tenn., will be honored at a testimonial dinner Wednesday at Lake Junaluska in vie\y of his forthcoming retirement. Dr. Schisler, executive secretary of the Methodist Board of Educa tion's Division of the Local Church, will retire this fall after 35 years of administrative service at Nashviye headquarters of the church. Friends and co-workers from throughout the South have been invited to the dinner, it was an nounced by Dr. George E. Clary, Sr.. program director at the south eastern Methodist Summer Assem bly here. Dr. Schisler will be here in con nection with a Southwide Leader ship School for Methodist workers, sponsored by his division. A native of Arkansas, he was admitted to>the Methodist ministry in 1912, and in 1920 he went to Nashville as a staff member of the church's old Sunday School Board. Visitor Dies Following Short Illness a Mrs. Edith Fletcher Church well, 62, of Jacksonville, Florida, who was spending a vacation at a Waynesville hotel, died Sunday afternoon in the Haywood County Hospital following a brief illness. Mrs. Churchwell was the widow of John H. Churchwell, Sr. She had been an occasional summer visitor to Waynesville for a num ber of years. : The body was taken to Jackson | vtlle for funeral services and burial. Mrs. Churchwell Is survived by a daughter, Mrs. L. R. Povelka of Jacksonville; a son, John H. Churchwell, Jr., also of Jackson ville; two sisters, Mrs. Thomas Nesbitt and Miss Annie Kate Fletcher; and one brother, Thomas E. Fletcher, all of Cardele, Geor gia; and four grandchildren. Garrett Funeral Home was in charge of arrangements here. Services Are Held For Mrs. Snead Funeral services for Mrs. W. L. Snead, 72, will be held at 4 p.m. today in Grantville, C>a., conducted by Methodist, Bishop Arthur J. Moore of Atlanta. Mrs. Snead, member of a w idely known Georgia family, was strick en by a heart attack Saturday morning at Lake Jhnaluska and died that night in an Asheville hospital. She was a member of the Board of Trustees of the Lake Junaluska Methodist Assembly, and had at tended a reception Friday night for the trustees in the eve of their annual meeting. W. N. Banks of Grantville, also a member of the board, is a broth er of the deceased. Another mem ber of the board, Sam Banks of Lakeland, Fla., is a cousin. Retired Pastor, Lake Resident, Dies At Oteen The Rev. Thaddeus L. McDon ald. 75, retired Methodist minis ter and long-time summer resident at Lake Junaluska. died at noon Thursday at the Veterans Hospital at Oteen. Rev. McDonald was a resident of Cullman. Ala., and a member of the North Alabama Methodist Conference. Funeral services were held Sun day in Cullman with Bishop Clare Pureell of Birmingham in charge. Family Life Conference, August 25-28. Dr. Edward D. Staples of the Methodist Board of Education, who directed the Methodist Church's national Family Life Con ference last October in Cleveland. Ohio, will be in charge of the pro gram. He said the conference is de signed especially for parents church school teachers and minis ters. The Rev. C. Leon Smith, Ros well. Ga., is chairman, and pro gram leaders include Bishop F. Gerald Ensley, Des Moines. Ia.: Bishop John Branscomb. Jackson ville. Fla., and Dr. Edwin R. Hartz of Florida State University's School of Social Welfare. Lambuth Inn the center of a program dedicated to Christian education, fellowship and building of church leadership." He assured the trustees that the ma lor emphasis will continue to be placed on the program, and said "it Is our desire to strengthen it wherever possible." Gate records show that atten dance Is running ahead of last sum mer, it was reported by the Rev. J. W. Fowler, Jr., assembly super intendent. More people are build ing summer cottages and perma nent homes at the lake, and 50 new residential lots are being opened i in a development on South Lake [ shore Drive, he said in his annual report. Streets have been laid out, and sewer lines, water mains and fire hydrants already have been Installed. The trustees adopted a program of future improvements to include completion of Interior improve ments at Shackford Hall?a con ference center?and replacement of the adjacent dormitory-type lodges and the Junaluska Cafe teria. These improvements will be included in the 1956-60 sched ule of the Buildings and Grounds Committee, headed by Hugh Mas sie of Waynesville. The 1956 summer program of conferences, schools and institutes is virtually complete, it was re ported by Dr. Clark, chairman of the program committee, and Dr. George E. Clary, Sr., program di rector. The Rev. Mr. Fowler, Dr. Clary and members of the assembly staff were highly complimented by the trustees for the appearance of the buildings and grounds, and the successful summer program. County Tours (Continued from Page 1) Thursday, August 18?White Oak at West Pigeon. Saturday, August 20 ? Allen's Creek at Fines Creek. Saturday, August 27 ? Saunook at South Clyde. The CDP programs open at 9:30 a.m. with a tour of the host com munity until noon. After lunch, usually served at a nearby school or community house, a program of activities Is presented?including community group singing, guessing games, bubble gum contest, horse shoe pitching, and Softball games. THE REV. HAROLD M. ROB INSON, pastor of the Memorial Methodist Church of Thomas ville, will be the platform speak- I er tonight at 8 o'clock in the main auditorium of the Lake Junaluska Assembly. "Changing Hearsay Into Experience" will be Dr, Robinson's subject as he con cludes a series of three lectures. He spoke this morning and last night. United Fund (Continued from Page 1) been organized at Brevard. Hen dersonville and Asheville also have UF groups. Organization of a United Fund group in the Waynesville area would affect only charity drives, it would not prevent organizations raising money by means such as sings, dances, plays, suppers, ath letic contests, sales of*baked goods, brooms, light bulbs, etc. Asheville Trio (Continued from page 1) Clyde Huntsinger, who reported that the three men removed a cable blocking the road and drove the car on the closed portion of the Parkway, The entire link of the Parkway in that area will not be opened to the public until paving has been completed?which is expected in the fall. Use tnr Want too for results Notices Of Excess Burley Acreage Mailed To 864 Notices of excess tobacco acre age liave been mailed to 854 bur ley producers in Haywood County during the past two months, it was disclosed today by A. W. Ferguson. ASC county manager. Of that number, 658 have already distroyed their excess tobacco un der ASC supervision, Mr. Ferguson said. Measurement of county tobacco acreage will be completed this week, the ASC supervisor pointed out. Only 43 farms ? mostly in Waynesville and Pigeon townships remain to be checked. Burley plots found to be in ex-? cess of allotments were in the fol lowing communities: Beaverdam, 124; Clyde, 69; Crab tree, 74; East Fork, 23; Fines Creek, 75; Iron Duff, 39; Ivy Hill 86; Jonathan Creek. 118; Pigeon 62; Waynesville. 141; White Oak 21, and Panther Creek, 18. Home Agent Gives Rules For Ironing By RUTH CURRENT State Home Demonstration Agen. HOW TO IRON RAYON AM ACETATE ? Clothing research workers say to have fabrics at tht best dampness for ironing. Mosi acetate and rayon fabrics shoulc be ironed when they are slightly damp. However, there are one oi two exceptions to this rule; (1) Dress weight spun rayons can sometimes be ironed when they are entirely dry. (2) Sharkskin and heavier satins of rayon and acetate iron best when they are noticeably damp. Sharkskin should be rolled in a towel after washing, then ironed immediately. You'll have much better results if you iron rayons and acetates as soon as they have dried to the right degree of dampness, instead of waiting until they are entirely dry and then sprinkling. Sprinkling distributes moisture unevenly. IRON NATURALLY ? The aim of ironing is to make the garment look as it did when new. So, don't REV. CECIL HEFNER, pastor of j the Central Methodist Church, is now conducting a series of re vival services at the Elizabeth Chapel Methodist Church, con tinuing through Friday night. Glass Family DUDLEY, Mass. (API ? The Valter H. Tobin family collects 'lass?father, mother, daughter md son-in-law. And they're real ollectors: They won't even swap .mong themselves, says Mrs. Tobin. "We've got so many collections I keep my antiques down cellar," ays Tobin. He especially fancies bottles, nostly flasks, but also rare glasses ind steins, plus some 120 glass jaskets. His wife collects Tiffany glass md china. She gets baskets but won't share them with her husband for they're high on her collection pull or stretch the fabric and don't use heavy pressure. Do iron with the grain of the fabric. Use a clean, well-padded iron ing board, with a taut cover and thick, firm padding. Where possible iron on the wrong side of the fabric. Touch up col lars, pockets, etc., on the right side, using a pressing cloth. DEAT* INFANT *iJ The infant son of Thomas J. Mason ?(? Sunday in the coumyB In addition to the 1 is survived by thtS Tommy. Roger and 3 the home; the pater^H ents, Mr. and Mrs. j3 Canton; and the 1 father, George Robi^S Graveside rites *<3 a.m. today at Bun-.yy J tery. The Rev. J cl officiated. ? Wells Fui (i si HuJ was in charge of art J Daughter Mis La; J berg collects antiqn,* believe eggs, that is A of blown glass, ivonB wtaat-have-you. ai^B line of sugar, salt ? shakers. Tobin infected hisB giving him a shavuB one in Tobin's iB through the Civil? Lundberg has a sh?l lection to excite thfl barber shop quartet? United Slates npB hat t o products cotjl 1954, which were vl million dollars, wereB cent lower thunthoB still were well aboB the preceding tears I TOO I All NOW THE L. N. Di Main St. LAFF. A ? DAY ?'i II 1 i cm mm. uhc mrvut itwkatt u. ?om? uc*m immt "The boys are planning a staff meeting, dear. Can I go?" This week Buick soars past the 600,000 mark! ' ; ? . ? " ' ?? . ? ? , . - ' V ' ? ' '? ?' ' . , "? ' . V ? - ? '? " Biggest-selling Buick of all time permits us to make the biggest trade-in deals ever possible!! Here it is, just past July, and what do you think has happened? Buick popularity has broken every past full-year record! That's the gospel truth. And Buick, of course, has had many great years before. At the beginning of this week, Buick production passed 600,000 ears for the 1955 model year. That is over 155,000 more automobiles than the full model year of 1954?when we captured third place in total national sales. It is more than 11,000 higher than the full model year of 1950 ? when the automobile industry had its greatest year, and Buick established an all-time record that stood unchallenged until now. It is almost a quarter of a million more automobiles than the full model year of 1941?which was the greatest pre war record Buick ever reached. In other words, there has never been anything before like 1955 in Buick history?when today Buick is building over A three cars every minute to meet the public demand. Doesn't this tell you something important? Doesn't this soaring Buick success mean that you owe it to yourself to see and sample the car that's breaking every record in the Buick book? Doesn't it mean that you ought to try Buick's mighty V8 power?Buick's great room and comfort ?Buick's cruiser steady ride and readability?Buick's superb visibility and precision handling ease? And doesn't it mean you certainly, ought to try Buicks Variable Pitch Dynaflow* ?the world's only transmission with the switch-pitch principle of the modern plane's pro peller?and the most spectacular performance advance of the year? Come in and see us?this week, at the latest?and learn for yourself why today's Buick is the biggest-selling Buick of all time ?and how big a trade-in deaj. we can offer you with this tremendous volume to back us up. *Variable Pilch Dynafimv is the only Dynaflow Buick builds today. It is .stand ard on ROADMASTLR, optional at modest extra cost on oilier Series. ?v ? ? ? and' ^ I ' 1 WHIN KTTiR AUTOMOHUS AH ?UIIT IUICK WIU ?UI10 THSM ' ^ Enjoy cooW, fm?<d a^sMess than yon think | JAVIOR MOTOR C a^'xssfr 1 mv/ h.vwo^

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