Newspapers / The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, … / July 30, 1956, edition 1 / Page 7
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22 Found Eligible For Soil Bank Twenty six Haywood County farmers have applied for soil bank aid through the ASC but only 22 were found eligible. A. W. Fergu son, county ASC manager, disclos ed Friday as the deadline for mak ing application for the program was reached Mr. Ferguson said his office has not been informed as to when payments will be made on 1956 crops, but he estimated the date as around November 1. During the second week jn Aug ust, Mr. Ferguson explained, the ASC will check performance on farms participating in the soil bank program to measure acreage to be tai?in out ?f cultivation for the re3fik%er of the year This rWT-k will require about three days, he added. Weekly Story Hour Is Held At Library All children, including visitors in the community, are invited to a weekly story hour which is being held at the Haywood County Li brary under the auspices of the Waynesvilie Homemakers Club. The story hour is held each Thursday morning at 10 o'clock in the Children's Itoom at the Library. , Members of the sponsoring club, who have had wide experience in teaching children, are serving as story tellers. On next Thursday morning the program will be con ducted by Mrs. Joe Cathey and and Mrs. Frank Kirkpatrick. The story hours will continue through August 16 and a party will be held on the closing date. "Say, ladies, do you watch those true-to-Jife soap operas on your television screen?" "Do VOU notice thno> ??*??? ? ? typical hundred dollar house dresses t h a t John's - otner - wife' wears?" "And how about that 30x50 foot living room setting with umpteen pieces o t gorgeous furnishings and the numerous s e 1 vaftts nearby?" ?l,.. a j_. v?urtiiy me hi i ipi aepicis some kind of economic and emotional tragedy in connection with John's meander ings but you can Be sure that Portia is not without her chauffer and mink stole And if this is the typical house- j hold scene, we at NBl-SON'S TV | SERVICE have been calling on the wrong homes Hereafter we will make our service calls with tux and tails. When you phone GL 6-6581 watch for the arrival of the best electronic instrumented serviceman of the year He'll guarantee you satisfaction at an average house-, wives prices. He'll even wipe his shoes off before he walks over your living room rug. ? ? POURING OF CONCRETE lor the middle sec tion of the main portion of tne swimming pool at the Wa.vnesville area Recreation Center was completed Saturday morning. The only concrete work left to be done at the new pool is pouring ( the diving well on the west side of the pool? c which will he completed this week. 1 (Mountaineer Photo*. 1 Commencement Is Set Aug. 17 For WCC Graduates Commencement exercises will be held at Western Carolina Col-1 lege Friday evening. August 17, at! eight o'clock in Hoey Auditorium, it was announced by President VV. E. Bird. There are thirty-nine candidates for t lie bachelor's degree and forty five for the Master of Arts in Edu cation George VV McCoy, Associate Editor of the Ashevitle Citizen Times, will deliver the eommeiicc merit address. Prior to the ceremony, dinner will be served in the eolk'ge din ing room for degree candidates and their guests They will also be guests- of the college for break fast Saturday morning. President Bird said week-end ac tio it ie- will resume at two o'clock Saturday afternoon. Augu|t 18. when member s of the Alumni Asso ciation are expected to arrive on the campus for a two-day stay; Features of the week-end pro gram will be a banquet and inform al reception Saturday evening, and a tour of the various attractions at Cherokee on Sunday. A picnic sup per will he served at. Cherokee at six p:m Sunday. .August 19 A Bath? CHARLESTON. VV. Va. VP' \ pair of sodden-looking characters v.ere wondering where they could gel a free cup of coffee Otle asked; "Why don't We try Ken Hager's place you know. Soul's Harbor Mission?" The other replied; "Haven't you heard'.' They make you take a bath every night before , you go to bed." Assembly Approves Pearsall1 Plan For September Vote ' BISHOP LLOYD C. WICKER is in charge of the workshop pro gram of leaders of Methodist Homes now in session at Lake Junaluska. Heads Children's Homes In Session At L. Junaluska More than 100 house-parents and administrators of Methodist Chil dren's Homes throughout the coun try opened their fifth annual insti tute and workshop today iMonday at the Lake Junaluska summer as sembly. The institute was first held in 1951 and is sponsored by the Meth odist Board ol Hospitals and Homes, Chicago. M is< Helen R. Ragen of New York, assistant executive director The shortest session in its history ended Fridav as the North Carolina i legislature approved the Pearsall 3 Plan dealing with the public school } segregation problem. < Two constitutional amendments containing the main features of the ' plan will be voted upon by.the peo-j pie of the state on September 8. I' The amendments would permit .1.1) j state-paid tuition grants to send a p student to private school if his par- f ents object to his attending a raei- I ally mixed school and <21 local op tion elections on lhc closing of lo cal schools if conditions become ["intolerable". The Lake plan, a more drastic means of dealing with the crisis, was overwhelmingly defeated. House and Senate adopted a joint resolution commending Gov ernor Luther Hodges for his "heroic leadership" in behalf of the Pearsall plan. The Governor then issued the following statement: "The General Assembly, repre senting the people of North Caro lina. has confirmed my great con fidence in the North Carolina Ad visory Committee on Education and j the wisdom of its approach to the present public school problem. No | General Assembly has ever given ; any more devoted time and con centrated study to specific legisla- j lion than this one has given to the ! recommendations of what is known ' as the Pearsall Committee "The overwhelming support by ! the members of the General As sembly, in my opinion, reflects the ! thinking and the feelings of the general public of North Carolina and the great confidence of the i people in the legislation that has ! been enacted. "In numerous conferences before arid during the Soeeiat Session I have talked with many individual members of the General Assembly who hav? expressed themselves as willing and anxious to explain fur ther this important program to their fellow citizens who are so keenly interested in our public schools. I bejieve that the correct ness with which the members of the General Assembly have repre . sooted public sentiment in this | State, borne out by hundreds of letters, telegrams and calls which I have received, indicates a heavy vote on the constitutional amend ment on September 8. and an over- < of the Child Welfare League of America, will serve as resource leader and speak on "Present Op portunities for Children's Homes '' Methodist Bishop Lloyd C. I Wicke, Pittsburgh. Pa., is in charge of the daily worship program, and I will speak Tuesday and Wednes day. Refurnishing Of Carver Home Is Completed The refurnishing of the Jack Carver home, to replace posses sions destroyed in a fire last Sun day, has been completed with the donation of a refrigerator by a Waynesville merchant Mr. and Mi's. Carver and their eight children iost all their pos- IF sessions las( Sunday when their home on Aliens. Creek burned ( while they were away. After the fire, the Rev. C. 1. Al len. Rufus Siler, and James Turn er conducted a campaign to collect items for the homeless family Fur i niture stores gave household items, j and individuals contributed linens, I pots and pans, wearing apparel J and money and the Carver family ? has now been reestablished in an- I . other home at Aliens Cn k blankenship Slated ro Return To l7S 9TII DIVISION Germany?Spe ?ialist Third Class Tommy Blank-1 ?nship. son of Mr and Mrs. A. J. Jlankenship of Canton, is schcd- i tied to leave Germany for th. ? l' S j n September as part of Operation j 3yroscopet the Army's unit rota ion plan. Blankonship is a member of the Ith Infantry Division, which is ce llaring the 8th Infantry Division; it Fort Carson Colo Blankenship is a ? -etion leader , n Company F of 'the division's 19th Regiment He entered the trmy in October 1954 and reeciv ?d basic training at Fort Jackson, >. C, He arrived in Kurope in day 1955. Blankenship attended Canton iigh School v helming endorsement of this pro tram to preserve our State-wide niblic school system." LOSING 1IIS LOCKS Friday afternoon was a sad occasion for little l.arry Dean Nelson, showing his displeasure as barber llilliard Camp clips his golden curls Larry is the son of Mr and Mrs. Law rence Nelson of IVa vnesville. I Mountaineer Photo). Canton City Limits Extended To Include Substation Road The Canton city limits haw been extended to include some 30 homes in the Sub-Station Koad area, town officials have an nounced Work is scheduled to begin as soon as possible on extending the town writer lint's to the newts in corporated area and on installing fire hydrants Streets will be improved and other town conveniences- added as rapidly as possible, officials stated Mexico reports that 1.800,000 over tier 30,000.000 people are invalids or partly incapacitated. Methodist Laymen Elect Floridian At Annual Meeting i If II Ben;. Melbourne, Kla . was elected ehajf matt of the South I eastern Association of Methodist I Laymen al the croup's annual I meeting at Lake Junaluska i The ineotii:'.' ended Sunday, fol , lowlne, ihtee days of workshops ai d platform, hours in the main '? auditorium Other new officers ale N. C. ; Iteash-y Mm fressboro, Tenn vice ! chairman. aiid (' It. ('lecc. Yotmc Harris. (.!.?. ccietaiy-treasUrei l)r fleck, president of Younf !Harris eollege. will also serve a; , the pt nc*i ain eliait man. The Tennessee Conference dele 'Science Digest' Uses Story By Lake Resident In the August issue. Science Di gest Magazine includes a five-page reprint from a recent book by Webb B. Garrison, summer resi dent a1 Lake Junaluska. Entitled "Volcanoes, Nature's Blast Fur naces." the article explains how these marvels of nature affect everyday life. It is condensed from Garrison's Winders of Science published in late spring by Sheed and Ward. New York. "This book has special ties with Haywood County." says the author. "Much of the manuscript was writ ten here. And two years ago, sev eral chapters w are used in teach ing a class of older youth at the Lake, Though not labelled as 're ligious,' the hook attempts to show God's hand in the strange and marvelous phenomena of natural ' events." Wonders of. Science is published under Garrison's pen-name, "Gary Webster." w hich he signs to science ; and nature articles. He also writes j under his own name. Whv you Say It published last year by Abingdon I fre-.s, is perhaps his best-known j book I ~ ~~ ' " More than 400.000 skilled young men under 30 were deferred by the 1 S draft program in World War ! II. grit ion, numbering tifi laymen,, won the attendance trophy The trophy i-' awarded to the group traveling the most "man-miles." The Ala bama Conference delegation was second and the Virginia Confer I once placed third. KEEP THIS AD! | Over 20,000 Arthritis and Rheu inatic Sufferers have token this Medicine since it has heeh on the t market. It is inexpensive. Van be s | taken in the hoove. -For Free in forrnation. give naine and address to P. O. Box 826,. Hot Springs, Ark "I Another revolutionary new development by GOODYEAR ! See in the demonstration test above huw the new Captive Mt Sufrty 7/m?clashed through uitita biife-^iarried this car for I/O miles ? The car you see in the circle is coming off New York's Trib?>rough Briilgi?- with a gupinj? hole in its right front tire. V.# cut a"twowinch slash right through the side of that tire . ?. . but we know that both driver and car a're safe. The re serve air in the inner chamber, lets the car thread safely through heavy traffic without danger or delay. Fact if, that car rolled on for three hour* ? J in mites it legal speeds ?* without further damage! Here's dramatic proof you no longer have to.change a tire along the road! ssuwwe-air safety tire br good/vear The new Nylon Captive-Air Safety Tire ? inspired by Goodyear's famous double-air chamber LifeGuard ? lets you ride safely and securely on two independent cushions of air. If the outer tire is cut, torn, or blown out, the reserve air in the inner tire supports your car. You can drive at legal speeds for 100 miles or more . . . without the danger of tire-changing in heavy traffic . . . without costly towing charges or road repairs. This new tire also gives you the powerful, live-action traction of the new Twin-Grip tread, the brawn of 3-T Nylon Cord, and Grip-Seal construction for extra protection against punctures. We have only a limited supply! Be sure to see the Captive-Air Tire soon! If a punc tyre any where in this HB^^' / j^C^Wp^^^iV'/r3 reiervp oir supports j S ???????1HBH your cor 100 miles L / i I Triple-tempered 3-T I ?r ? ? u"'1' Y?J ? /"T'^***" _^E I Nylon Cord body I recch a convenient lire '\i "*r c,lonib~^~^-^B I gives you greater I setv'ce notion Kf- ? jf >0 **< lbs. '"'ff{"td M 1 I safety un.l gives you It V-r r^^ZAm , ,.rto"'be7ij^^^B ? o within a tire BfcVV S^'W It,. ^'^<??.d ? I for pr ' ?'n Rm^ " fl MM against the I H blowouts. KtiQh^a*tiK ^ V^9Jilm/ mW&tfeiBSS^K ONLY GOODYEAR HAS THE CAPTIVE-AIR... THE SAFETY TIRE WITH A BUILT-IN SPARE! j* ALLISON & DUNCAN TIRE CO. ?4-l2S^ "Tire Service Headquarters" ?J? ^ (ieor(? Avenue ^ ^ Hazel wood i 6 WAYNESVILLE ART GALLERY 2 - AUCTION SALES DAILY - 2 10:30 A.M. and 8 P.M. The Largest Collection Of Art In The South Consisting of: Diamonds, Watches, English Plate, Royal Copenhagen, Dresden, Meissen, Crown Derby, Spode, Persian Rugs, Linens, Paintings. Sterling by Georg Jensen, International Gorham, Tiffany. Watches by Pommier, Famous French Designer, and other Famous Brands. THIS IS OUR 24th CONSECUTIVE YEAR IN WA\ NESVILLE 153 MAIN STREET James Mann- 0"ner A\NES\ ILLE c p. ... . .... ?. ? <um Rodnev. A1 Weinman, Fred Uurant?Personnel Seymour Lisen, Ward Lidridge, Sam uoaney, Nat Neederman. Barnard Kauftman - Associate Auctioneers I I \ IS I YOUR ^FAMILY'S f HEALTH PROTECTED o WllipiV l\ IUI((IVM ?!?*? maternity care com only a it* pennies a day WRITE OR CALL FOR FUU DETAILS RrprrsentitlTe WAYNE ROGERS Lake Jnnalnska, N. C. Phone: GLendale 8-5591 I
The Waynesville Mountaineer (Waynesville, N.C.)
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July 30, 1956, edition 1
7
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