Rites Are Set For Friday For Mrs. Corzine Funeral services will be held in Long's Chapel Methodist Church Friday at 3 p.m. for Mrs. Carrie Felmet Corzine, 83, of Canton, who died Tuesday in the Haywood County Hospital following an ex tended illness. The Rev. Don Payne and the Rev. Cecil Hefner will officiate and burial will be in Green Hill. Cemetery. The body wiy remain at Garrett Funeral Home until Friday at 2:30 p.m. when it wiU be taken to the church. Active pallbearers will be Jule Noland, James T. Noland, Billy McCracken, A. C. Jones, R. H. Boone, and Robert McCracken. Honorary pallbearers will be R. G. Liner, H. D. Harrison, C. B. Medford Wilson Barefoot, Dr. J. R. Westmoreland, C. H. Eskridge, Howard Sellars, Wallace Ward, Cash Edwards, Dr. A. R. Clark, Millard Gaddis, Robert C. Fran cis, and Shuford Howell. Flower bearers will be members of the Waynesville Chapter No. 165. Order of the Eastern Star. Mrs. Corzine was a native and lifelong resident of Haywood County and was the daughter of the late Benjamin and Alice Bat tle Felmet, numbers of promi nent Haywood County families. She was the widow of Zeb A. Corzine. Mrs. Corzine was a member of Long's Chapel Methodist Church and the Waynesville chapter of the Eastern Star. For the past 20 years, she had made her home with a sister, Mrs. J. M. Tate of Canton. Prior to that time she had lived in Waynesville. Surviving are another sister, Mrs. Grover Leatherwood "of Lake Junaluska; two brothers, S. R. Felmet of Canton and John Fel met of San Antonio, Texas; and several nieces and nephews. Jack Hall Dies At 74 Near Murphy News has been received here of i the death of Jack Hall, a former resident of the Thickety section and later of Clyde, which occurred last week at Tomotla near Mur phy, while working for a neighbor. Death was attributed to a heart attack. Hall, 74. was the son of the late Kimsy dnd Pollyanne Wright Hall of Haywood County. He was a car penter by trade, and had lived in the Murphy area for a number of years. The funeral service was held FriJfay ' in the Tomotla Methodist Church, and burial, with Masonic rites, was in the church cemetery. Surviving are the wife, Mrs. Mary E. Morris Hall; five sons. Leonard of Detroit, Mich., Jack of Clinton, Tenn., Kimsey of Orlando, Fla., and Richard of Chicago; five daughters. ' Mrs. Helen Hall of Portsmouth, Va., Mrs. Fred Hens- I ley of Kent, Ohio, Mrs. Arthur Ar- ' rant of Magadone. Ohio, Mrs. I Kelly Barnes of Waco, Texas, and 1 Mrs. Elizabeth Railings of West Overfleld. Mass.; and a number of 1 grandchildren. i DEATHS MRS. CLAUDE ROGERS 1 Mrs. Claude C. Rogers, 42, of ; Portsmouth, Va., died Tuesday a boiit 11:20 a.m. in Portsmouth fol- ( lowing a long illness. Mrs. Rogers, a native of Hay wood County, had been living in Portsmouth the last several years. 1 She was the former Miss Annie < Clontz. daughter of the late Willie 1 and Carrie Lowe Clontz of Hay- ] Waynesville Man Killed In Accident Walter W. Russell Jr. 21. of Route 3, Waynesville was killed in an auto accident about 20 miles south of Albuquerque, N. M. f jes day night. New Mexico highway patrolmen reported the car Russell was driv ing skidded off a curve and blamed the accident on speeding. A passenger. Jack L. Ockerman, 21, of Oakley, Mich., was injured critically, the officers said. Russell left home about a month ago to go to Detroit, Mich., to work. He was a son of Walter and Celia Massie Russell of Route 3, Waynes ville. A native of Haywood County, fie had served four years in the Navy and was discharged last Novem ber. Surviving in addition to his par ents are six sisters. Mrs. David Smathers of Cleveland, Ohio, Mrs. Ray Woods of Waynesville. and the Misses Florence, Delma Sue, Shel by Jean and Doris Dale Russell, of the home: four brothers, Mark of Maggie, Bill of Waynesville, and f 1 a v-? t ? - cj.nuufi ana ooooy 01 me nome; and the maternal grandfather, the Rev. Will Massie of Waynesville. The body will arrive in Waynes ville Friday and wilL be taken to the home on the Pigeon Road. Funeral services will be held in the Bethel Baptist Church. Satur day at 2:30 p.m. with the Rev. Thomas Erwin and the Rev. Will Farr officiating. Interment will be in Green Hill Cemetery. Pallbearers will be Eugene Rus sell, Eugene Plemmons, Milliard McGee, Forest Russell. Carol Rus sell. and Joe Russell. Cousins will serve as flower bearers. Arrangement are under the di rection of Garrett Funeral Home. wood County. Funeral services will be held in Morningstar Methodist Church here at 11 a.m. Friday. The pastor, the Rev. Kenneth Crouse will officiate. Burial will be in the church cemetery. - The body arrived today and has been taken to the home of Mr. and Mrs. L. R. Jones in Canton. It will remain there until time' for the services. Surviving are the husband: three sons, Troy Lee Rogers of Weldon, N. C., and Richard R. and Ralph C- Rogers of Portsmouth; three sisters, Mrs. Ted Cole of Yancey County, Mrs. Phil Range of De troit, Mich., and Mrs. Francis Chapman of Canton; five broth ers, Charlie, Harold, Earl. Luther and Audrey Clontz of Canton; and a grandchild. Crawford Funeral Home is in charge of the arrangements. It is estimated that .the 1954-55 fetching egg production would lirectly result in around llVfc mil liop pounds of chicken meat being processed in North Carolina. KURT 'GANS ? "The Store Brides Prefer" of boawty |?? practical, so beautiful, so durable! Golden Dirilyte ... for pog $49 95 lasting loveliness in modern living! Now ONLY $3995 mmm 18 Piece Starter Set Holloware and serving ^&<?iM pieces also available SEE DIRILYTE TODAY! | ? USE OUR - Mg HOMEMAKERS . fistAJJ BUDGET PLAN I F ^4C W C 4 i . A. ? t News Items From Thickety Section Mr. and Mr*. Roy A. Robinson have issued invitations to tfce mar riage of their daughter, Miss Rowena Robinson of Wilmington. to,Warren Lee Kafitz of the U. S. Air Force The wedding will be held in the Hock wood Methodist Church on Saturday afternoon. May 26, at 4:30 o'clock. A recep tion will be held in the social hall of the church following the cere mony. Mrs. Horace Donaldson honored her daughter. Judith Ann on her fourth birthday Friday when she entertained a group of children at a party. Those attending were Shirley Lane. Carey and Freda Crane. Jennie Mae and Donna Faye Gibson, and Linda Shook. Mrs Joe B. Carswell and daugh ter, Pamela, left Sunday for De troit. Mich. Mr. Carswell who has been employed there for some time, came down to accompany them on the trip. a The Woman's Society of Chris tian Service of Rockwood Church will meet today, Thursday, at the home of Mrs. Roy Robinson for the regular monthly meeting. Mem bers will be recognized in keeping with Mother's Day. Mr. and Mrs. Tom Jimison and children visited relatives near Mur phy over the weekend. Miss Artie Williamson has re sumed work at Swannanoa Veter ans' Hospital after several weeks absence on account of illness. Mr. and Mrs. Loy Lee William son and young son are moving to the Coffeu Branch section this week. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Willis and boys, Mrs. C. A. Willis and Misses Melba and Bonnie Willis, visited Pvt. Dale C. Willis at Portsmouth, Va? during the week-end. Pvt. Willis who was injured in an ac cident while serving in Korea, arrived at Portsmouth from a hos pital in Tokyo, Japan. He is re covering nicely from a broken hip. sustained in the accident. Revival Services To Open Sunday At Riverside Ch. By MRS. J. EDGAR BURNETTE Community Reporter Revival services begin Sunday at 7:15 p.m. at the Riverside Bap tist Church. Preaching will be the Rev. John Smith of Dutch Cove Baptist. Pastor of Riverside is the Rev. Paul Gcogan. The Riverside B.T.U. were hosts on Sunday evening to the Green Valley B.T.U., with the visitors joining the host church during the regular program by separating into various age groups. Following the lesson study the Intermediates of the visiting group presented the general assembly program. Mrs. Glenn Chambers is group leader: Pless Kirkpatrick, director and the Rev. George Mehaffey, pastor. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Lanning mov ed last week to Retreat. Leonard Rogers and Howard In man recently left for work in Deer Park, Wash. Mr. and Mrs. Paul Metcalf have moved to the Cogburn apartment. Pvt. Billy Warren, stationed at Gary, Ind., recently spent a 40-day furlough with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Willis Warren. Pvt. Troy Hargrove received a weekend furlough to visit Mrs. Rufus Hargrove, recuperating in St. Joseph's Hospital, Ashevllle. Mrs. Ray Phillips has joined her husband, Pfc. Ray Phillips at Ft. Ord, Calif. Communities Now Completing Entries For CDP Contest About 15 Haywood County com munitics are expected to enter the WNC Rural Community De velopment Contest, according to County Agent Virgil Holloway. Deadline for entries is May 15. Communities which have al ready arranged to participate are Ratcliffe Cove, Francis Cove, Thickety, South Clyde, West Pi geon, Aliens Creek, Saunook, Iron Duff, White Oak, Upper Crabtree. Fines Creek, Cecil, Cruso and East Pigeon, with others ex pected to complete their registra tions before the deadline'.. County contest cash prizes total $1,000. County winners compete in the district contest, with prizes totaling more than $2,000. Judging will take place in the fall. The costs of marketing a given quantity of food have increased 83 per cent since 1945, according to Ohio State University extension marketing specialists. Studies show hurricanes do not form when ocean surfaces are be low 82 degrees Farhrenhcit. ? 4 Mother Is a Glamor Girl FOREVER YOUNG . . . Pat Marshall, who portrays a modern mother in the new Broadway musical, "Mr. Wonderful," wears two typical summer fashions designed by Gloria Swanson. Left, burn out eyelet cotton sMrtwaist dress, crisp and cool for summer wear; right, wraparound style in "miraole" blend. Miss Marshall, wife of Dan Markowits and mother of three, recently was named God mother of the Year by Godmothers League. nj inmuini ivv/r. Associated Press Women's Editor "EVERYONE either is a mother or has a mother," says Karl Rosen, a dynamic young man whose firm turns out close to .four million dresses a year for modern moth ers who like to look young. As a move toward smartening up fashions for the mature figure. Rosen hired one of the world's most glamorous grandmothers. Gloria Swanson, to design clothes that she herself would wear and to present them in fashion shows around the country several times a year. The combination has been a decided success. Gloria meets and greets thousands of women every year in towns across the nation, gives them her own ideas of fa shion. and comes back singing the praises of the average American woman, who does not allow herself to grow old. As Gloria puts it: ' rasmon is not an age problem but a size problem." To illustrate her point, she has shown an identical fashion in four sizes ? for a little girl, a junior miss, a mother and a grandmother ?providing a sure-fire climax for a fashion show. When GJoria is in Europe, as happens frequently she sends back reports on the new trends in French and Italian fashions, many of which are incorporated in Am erican styles. Rosen also enlists many of the famous couturiers of London, Paris and Rome to design fashions espe cially for his line. Among these have been such top designers as Jacques Fath, Desses. dc Givenehy, Rodriguez and Norman Hartnell. Tile era of "old lady" clothes is past, says Rosen, and every woman has a right to look young in well fitting. youthfully styled fashions. Personal News Of Fines Creek By MRS. SAM FERGUSON Community Reporter Mrs. Floyd Smathers of Biltmore visited her sister, Mrs. R. C. James, on Fines Creek for several da vs. While here Mrs. Smathers also was a guest of the Home Demonstration Club meeting at l ie home of Mrs. C. S. Green. Mr and Mrs. Buster Brown, with their children, Ray David and Donna, of Newport News, Va are visiting their parents. Mr. R f Brown and Mr. and Mrs. Grove Trantham on Fines Creek, and also Mr. Brown's s'fer. Mrs. Reeves Ferguson of Ptsgah For est, and other relatives. Sam Ferguson made a business trio to Robbinsville Tuesday 11? also visited his uncle, Baseombe Ferguson, who lives in that sec with his son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Cordell Russell. Bill Rogers is receiving his dis charge from Army service his week He and his wife will in Wavnesville. Mrs. Rogers is enri nloVed at the First National Bank. Ihe wis formerly Miss Regtna Ferguson. Helping David 1Noland cut a boundary of timber on the "urrl cane section of Fines Creek are Bill Lowe Milas Rathbone and ?om Ferguson. They work in the timber cutting when the ground too wet for farm operations. Our Fines Creek school princi pal Charles Ross, with Ms wi? Mrs Mark Ferguson and Clyde Beasley took a large "umber of Z senior class on . vacaUon tr P to Florida. They left here Sunday morning, expecting gone three or four days. Rill Ferguson returned to Moore 0r,r iv rri"? - some time. .. Mrs. Turner s Mother Dies In Lincolnton ^wTy^vili died m a Lincoln, hospital Monday afternoon. nX8\nXi^eWrecttybMethodi,t pjiv. and sons. ""mS Turner is expected to re turn tomorrow after attend.ng the services. Tse the Want Ads w results. Library Notes LASTING MEMORIALS Recently added to the Haywood County Public Library: Secret of Happiness given by Mrs. D V. Phillips and family, Kate, Myra and Ann, in memory of Mrs. Joseph A. Calhoun. Speaking for the Master given by Mrs. D. V. Phillips and family,, Great American Heritage given by Mr. and Mrs. J. Howard Bry-1 son, in memory of Mr. Frank i Jaynes. Of Things Not Seen given by Mr. and Mrs. J. Howard Bryson, in memory of Mrs. Etta Kluttz. Practical Gardening given by Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Winter, in mem- | ory of Mrs. Joseph A. Calhoun. Gift From the Sea given by Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Donnelly, in memory of Mrs. Joseph A. Calhoun. The Secret of Happiness given by Mr. and Mrs. Joe Jack Atkins, in memory of Mr. Denton Browning. Guideposts Anthology given by Dr. and Mrs. Boyd Owen, in mem ory of Edgar Denton Browning. Interpreter's Bible given by Dr. and Mrs. O. H. Champion and the Lottie Moon Circle, in memory of Mrs. Joseph A. Calhoun. I Familiar Quotations given Mr. and Mrs. Joe Jack Atkins, in mem ory of Thomas Harry Kent. British Authors Before 1800 giv en by Mr. and Mrs. Dick Moody | and Mrs. L. B. Leatherwood, In memory of Mrs. James R Boyd, Jr. i Our Garden Soils given by Mrs. ; Fred Allison, in memory of Mrs. j James R. Boyd, Jr. ? All of the Women of the Bible | given by W.S.C.S. of Shady Grove' Methodist Church, in memory of; Mrs. James R. Boyd, Jr. American Authors 1600-1900 and Twentieth Century Authors given by Mr. James R. Boyd. Jr. and fam-' ily. in memory of Mrs. James R. Boyd, Jr. Famous American PaintA-s, giv en by Mrs. Ed Bright, In memory of Mrs. Ora Plott Mehaffey. Tips From the Top given by Tyker Miller, in memory of Edgar Denton Browning. The Key to Personal Power and Personal peace given by Mrs. Vera McCracken, in memory of Mrs. ; Rosetta West. Around the World In 1,000 Pic tures given by Mr. and Mrs. Simon Klnsky. in memory of Mrs. J. A. Calhoun. 1 ? ' I I ujeie (AjnOfimiL and so are these -xtra special ffifts! > . MtCrary NYLONS ! i ? 15 Denier ? 60 Gauge and Seamless Regular $1.25 *1.00 . 3 PAIRS $2?? k MOTHER'S DAY SPECIAL! First Quality ?> ?? WfC* State Pride XfflHH I X Muslin ** Type 130 54 ' 81 x 99 ? Reg. $1.69 /? "A ? ' m ' ? i l.arge lame hi PIECE GOODS In Printed Pongee, Rayon, Shantung, etc. All New Spring and Summer Colors Regular . Q 97c Per Yard ? Yd' i Cannon Hath TOWELS with ? Daoron & Nylon Reinforced Selvage for Longer Wear?* R. 6 colors to choose from ? ins 22 x 44. Extra Heavy Weight. EACH 2 ?*$150 C I O fT NYLON ^Llr ^ Burlington ?? Sizes 32 to 44 ? Nylon Q K V~, f Lace Trim Top and Bottom ^ A * ^ \ Fine Quality ? White *1 i\ Ladies Nylon Tricot PANTIES All Sizes WJ ~ 1st Quality M Lace Trim m Jw BLOUSES 4 MacShore Sizes 32 to 38 ? White and Pastels ? Short Sleeves and Sleeveless. $298 J $395 ? Ladies' CASUALS and SANDALS a White, black, tan and beige ? All Sizes. $^98 | Ir? Belk: Hudson Black and Brown $1-29 Each ^te^liraillwJIiHIHllHIIHI

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