Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / July 5, 1956, edition 1 / Page 14
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Ratcliffe Cove CDP Will Play Host To Francis Cove MRS. GROVEK FRANCIS Community Reporter The Ratcliffe Cove CDP will hold Un regular meeting Tuesday. July 10, at T:30 p.m. in the old Baptist Church building. The Francis Cove CDP will be our guests and will present the program. .Mrs. firamlett Stone will be in in charge I of the devotional. Refreshments will be served j Ti juping Union officers and lead ers who began the new church year last Sunday ntght in the itat- | cliffe Cove Baptist Chut eh were Jimmy Messpr, director; Mrs. Troy Justice, general secret'.ry; Mrs. ! Jimmy Messer, nursery-beginner | leader. Mrs. Lee Gaddy, primary j leader; Mrs. Roy Meador: Mrs. Algic Ratcliffe and Mrs. Claude Francis, intermediate leaders. Miss Julia Reynolds has return ed to her home in California after spending the past sc hool term with her grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Chambers. She attended the sixth grade at East Waynos ville School. Miss Peggy Camp and friends. Misses Faye and Justine Buchanan, are vacationing in Georgia and Florida this week. The Rev. Gay Chambers has been reelected to serve as part-time pastor of the Ratcliffe Cove l^aptist Church. He will preach on the 1st and 3rd Sunday mornings and the 2nd and 4th Sunday nights The church recently installed a new piano and unbreakable glass in the baptistry. _?j Roy Meador, who is employed at the shipyard in Newport News, Va? spent the weekend With his family. Mr. and Mrs Eugene Sanford of J Asheville spent the weekend with i . his parents, Mr and Mrs Fred ' Sanford. |' __ i Mr?,-Roy Meador is a patient at j Haywood County Hospital. j t Mr. and Mrs, Calvin Francis of j South Carolina, formerly of this community, announce the birth of j ( a son, June 16 Tree- Farm Movement A WASHINGTON D C. iAP> The 1 na|ionaJ, Tree Farm movement, aimed at growing and harvesting r trees,*o this country will Mways I have an adequate source of wood 1 pulp and lumber, has now been I extellded to 42 states. Vermont and Connecticut in joining 40 other 1 states brought to more than 8,000 < the number of tree farms certified 1 by live American Forest Products ' Industries, Inc. They embrace v nearly 39 million acres. RFV. I.F.ON SMITH OR I.rON M. AOKINS DR. DONALD M. MAYNAUD DR. EDWARD STAPLES THE REV. LEON SMITH, Roswell, G?.. is chairman of the Metho dist Family l.ifr Conference. Southeastern Jurisdiction, which opened today at Lake Junaluska Other leaders include l>r. Don ald M. Maynard of Boston University: Dr. Lean M. Adkins and Dr. Edward l>. Staples, both of the Methodist Board of Educa tion headquarters in Nashville, Trnn. The group is meeting at Sfiarkford llall through Sunday with public sessions at 8 p.m. in the main auditorium. Family Conference Is In Session At Lake Junaluska "Religion Strengthens the -Fain ly" is the theme of a Southwlde ramlly Life Conference, today hrough Sunday, at the Methodist unimer assembly. Lake .lunaluska. The program of workshops and lisoussion groups is designed es pecial ly for parents, pastors and ?nurch workers, it was announced tv the Rev. C' Leon Smith, Ros sell, Ga.. conference chairman. lie listed the following discus don topics and leaders "Keeping Romance In Your Mar ?iagc." Dr. Donald M. Maynard, toston University ?aintHr O Plovd freely. Jr , F.mory University. At anta "Your Child's Religious Life," Dr. Mary Alice Jones, director of children's work at the Methodist Hoard of Education. Nashville, fenn.. and Dr. Joy Mayless. Nash ille, editor of The Christian Home. "Parents and Their Children." Mrs, C. I) MchafTey, Chattanooga. Trnn.. and Mrs Charles Robeson. Atlanta "Parents of Youth." Dr .lack It Millar. Jr.. dean of students at Greensboro College, and Mrs Ed ward I). Staples. Nashville. "The Local Church's Family Life Program." Dr. Edward I). Staples. Nashville, director of the Christian Family department, Mtlliodist Hoard of Education. "The Minister as a Marriage Counselor." Dr. Freely. Safety Slogan CHULA VISTA. Calif 'AP> ? Cards handed out by Arat Swain, lay reader at St. John's Episcopal Church, in behalf of traffic safety, read: "Drive carefully, you may hit an Episcopalian." Beginning July 9th, 1956 Or Whenever Berries Ripen In Your Section BLACKBERRIES BOUGHT EVERY DAY FOR INFORMATION SEE THE FOLLOWING BUYERS: ? FINES CREEK AND ADJOINING SEC TIONS ? See MARK FERGUSON ? JONATHAN CREEK SECTION ? See NATHAN CARVER * ? MAGGIE VALLEY SECTION ? See HOBERT WHITE ? WEST OF WAYNESVILLE TO BALSAM GAP ?Contact EAGLES NEST GROCERY * - ' ? ? J" Containers Furnished Berries Picked Up At Or Near Your Home J 4 ? '' * 1 V J}1 Crabtree Church Revival Continues MRS. MILLARD FERGUSON Community Reporter The Rev. John K. Miller, pastor of the First Methodist Church of Hayesviile. is conducting revival services each evening this week at 8 p.m. at the Crabtree Methodist Church The Rible school at Firichers Chapel closed a two-week session Tuesday with a picnic for the 33 students Teachers were the Rev. A. H. Davis. Mrs. Voder Ray. Mrs. Woodrow Plemmons, Mrs. Wayne Price, Mrs Anderson Massie. Mrs. Ted McClure. Mrs. Jack Rector and Mrs W. J. McCrary. Doyle Brown, sorn of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Brown, who recently joined the air force, is stationed ai San Antonio, Tex. Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Wells have u' their house guest for ten days Ale John K McBride of Danville, HI McBride has been stationed in Saudi Arabia and in Jerusalem | j and will now report to Dover. Del Benton McCrary, son of Mr. and , Mrs W. J. McCrary, who is em- , ployed by the Delta Steamship line. , left New Orleans. La., last week J for Argentina and other South | American ports. ?- I ] Mr. and Mrs. Monroe Yar- ; bough, accompanied by their son , and daughter-in-law. Mr and Mrs. . Aubrey Yarbrough, and their , granddaughter. Joyce, returned Saturday from a two-week vaca tion in Jacksonville. Gainesville and White Springs, Fla. 11 Jack Justice of High Point is ; here for ten days' vacation with ] his mother. Mrs Bill Parks, and , Mr. Parks. Mrs Dora Snyder. Mrs. Clarence | Green and Mrs. Tom Palmer have < returned to their homes from the ' Haywood County Hospital. ] i A recent guest of Mr and Mrs. I JOHN L. STICKLlY of C har lotte has been elected Interna tional President of Lions Inter national at the association's 39th annual convention in Miami, Fla. I.ions International, with 542, 828 members in 12.334 Lions flubs in 75 countries or rex ions, is the world's largest service club organization. U. H Holt was Paul Sweeting of Sassau. Bahamas. The fan.Uy of -Mr and Mrs Weaver Haney held a reunion last Sunday at the home of Mr. and Vlrs. Haney. All the family was present, including Mr. and Mrs. Karl Head and children of Lake Stephens, Wash.: Mr. and Mrs. J. L Haney and daughter and Mr. md Mrs. Herschel Haney and .?hildren of Newport News. Va.: and Mr and Mrs. Jack Tabor and children of Newport. Tenn. Weekend guests of the Rev. and Mrs. A. R. Davis were Mrs. Davis' brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs Donald C. Riley, and a niece, Vtiss I'amala Beal. of Washington, D. C.; and a brother. John Beale >f S.vlva. Mr. and Mrs. Junior Webb and heir children of Detroit. Mich., spent last weekend with Mr Webb's parents. Mr. and Mrs Bal lard Webb. Other Sunday visitors jI the Webbs were Mrs. Webb's brother-in-law and sister. Mr. and Mrs. Mard.v Plemmons of Leicester. ..lr. and Mrs. Glenn Clark of Newport News, Va.. arrived Sat urday to spend the Fourth with Mrs. Clark's sons and djjughters in-law. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas No land and Mr. and Mrs. II. It. No la nd Miss Ruth Ferguson returned Saturday from a week's vacation at Virginia Beach. Va. Mrs Mose Murry of Newberry, S. C-. was a visitor last week of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Brown. Mr. and Mrs. Larry Goldring of Peoria. 111., arrived Monday for a week's visit with Mrs. Goldring's parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Fergu son. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Fothergill and their children, Michael and Jan Maria, of Berea. Ky., are here visiting Mrs. Fothergill's mother, Mrs. Lonnie Kinsland. and Mrs. Kinsland. Also visiting the Kinslands last Sunday were Mrs. Kinsland's son "and daughter-in-law. Mr. and Mrs. Nay Kinsland of Asheville. Army Deserter Is Arrested By Haywood Officers Thomas Bragg Smathers. 24, of Candler is being held in the Hay wood County jail for FBI agents who have been seeking him on charges of desertion from the mili tary service at Camp Gordon. Ga. He was arrested early Saturday mornirg by a group of four law enforcement officers: Cpl. Prit chard H. Smith. Harold Dayton, and W. R. Woolen of the State Highway Patrol and Ck-puty Char lie Jones of the sheriff's office He was awakened from his sleep a! 2 a.m. at the home of relatives in Dutch Cove. ?8 Parts of the Bible have been ' translated into 1.002 languages under sponsorship of the American Bible Society. % Rev. W. N. Reece Accepts Pastorate l< In Hickory Area > I" REV. W. N. REF.fE Rev. W. N. Reece recently be ; came the pastor of the Berea Bap jtist Church in the South Moun tain Association and is located near Hickorv. He had been pastor of the North Canton Baptist Church since October 1952. During his four years of work at the Canton church. 151 mem- j hers were added to the church? ' 85 bv baptism and 66 bv letter and 1 j the Sunday School enrollment had increased to 315. A new $45,000 church was built and relocated during his pastorate here. In addition to his work with his ; church he took an active part in the work of the Havwood Associa i tion having served at different times as associational Sunday School Superintendent, chairman of evangelism and chairman of the executive committee. lTse Mountaineer Want Ads Comity's Rural Mail Routes Total More Than 550 Miles Rural mail carriers in Haywood bounty daily travel more than 550 niles in serving $5,400 families on [he cpunty's nitpe rural routes. This fact was brought out today py Postmaster Enos Boyd of Waynesville in stressing the im portance of the work done daily ?y rural carrier under all sorts of weather conditions. Mr. Boyd said there are approxi nately 3.050 mail boxes on the jounty's rural routes. Waynesville'g postoffice has four rural routes, Canton has three, and Clyde two. ingest of the nine is Clyde Route 1 through Crabtree, Iron Duff. ?"ine.s Creek and vicinity?which is ibout 89 miles long. North Carolina ranks 15th in the lation with 1,006 rural routes, cov ;ring approximately 50,000 miles In the United States, there are t!> 07R ntrnl rrmtpc?ttervintf nn oc. timated 9.570 986 families and cov ering 1.544.704 miles. Mr. Boyd said. This means, he added, that approximately 38.000.000 persons or more than one fifth of the na tion's population were served by rural delivery of mail in 1955. Mr. Boyd asserted that the daily / mileage traveled by rural ['I t iers would wear out an of 20 automobiles, 150 sets oT tires, and consume approximately 125, 000 gallons of gasoline each day. In observing National Mailbox Improvement Week, employees of the Waynesville. Canton, and Clyde postoffices are working with the county agent's office and CDP groups to improve the county's rural mailboxes. Expression of Sentiment DELANO, Minn. <AP)?A trend back to epitaph-personalized memorials is reported by an execu tive of a large cemetery monument firm. Don Gilmer of the Delano Granite Works said "this expres sion of sentiment is the essence of comemoration. These symbols of sentiment carry a message to posterity." Its a Great Time to Buy a Buick Buick Special 6-Passenger 2-Door Riviera * {And at the Best Buy Yet!) What's in it for >011?if you step out and buy yourself a 1956 Buick right no\y? Well, first of all ?the time is right. Right now, your present car is at its , peak worth. And, with the whole summer and almost half of '56 still ahead of you, you'll get more enjoyment out of a spirited new this year ? if you buy now. Seccaid, there's the matter of how much more automobile your money buys in the best Buiek yet. We tell you flatly that nowhere hut in a '56 Buick can you get sq much bounty 90 little booty. For example, take the beauteous big '56 Buiek Special pictured here. It's one big reason why Buiek now ranks in the top three of America's l>est-selling ears. Yet, you'll find it priced right close to the well-known smaller cars. I hat sure makes Buiek a whale of a lot of car for the money. And look: Nowhere but in a 56 Buiek can you get the absolute smoothness and the electri fying performance of BKick's terrific new Variable Pitch Dynaflow.* Nowhere else can you get the obedient responsiveness of Buiek s big and mighty new 322-cubic-inch V8 engine. Or Buick's matchless new handling ease and over-level ride buoyancy?or Buick's bold new sweep-ahead styling, and solidity of structure, and stretch-out roominess. Add it all up and the answer conies out the same, any way you figure it: Vow's the time to buy your 195fi Ihiick. Will you come in ? before another sun sets?and get set with your best buy yet? *.V<tt Advanced Variable riteh Dynaflou is the or!y Di/naflotc Snick hnilds today It is standard cn Road master., Super and Century?optional at modest extra cost on the Special. When better automobiles are built Buick will build tbtai Best i Buick mm mr : jackie gteason ? m m_l on tv MUL ? AIRCCJNDITIONINO at a COOl NEW IOW PRICE ?It ceelt. filtort, dohuwidiftot. Gat 4-Soasori Comfort in yovir now lukfc with gonuino FRIGIDAIRE CONDITIONING ww TAYLOR MOTOR COMPANY Haywood Stmt FRANCHISE? DEALER ? LICENSE NO. 981! Wayncovllle ^ J' jn
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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July 5, 1956, edition 1
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